Abstract
Liposoluble extracts of serum from healthy men and AIDS patients (stages IVC1 and IVD by CDC criteria) inhibited the incorporation of [3H]thymidine into isolated rat thymocytes, but AIDS extracts were less inhibitory, requiring 1.8 times more cortisol in the AIDS extracts than in the healthy extracts to inhibit [3H]thymidine incorporation by 50 %. Although the total serum extracts from AIDS patients contained 1.7 times more cortisol than the extracts from healthy controls, the AIDS extracts decreased the binding affinity (K a) of [3H]dexamethasone to rat thymus glucocorticoid receptors by 50% less than the healthy control extracts. The present study seems to indicate that a substance(s) can be extracted from the serum of AIDS patients that attenuates the inhibitory effect of cortisol on thymocyte proliferation and interferes with the binding of cortisol to the glucocorticoid receptor.
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