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Endocrine Reviews 21 (3): 292-312
Copyright © 2000 by The Endocrine Society

The Roles of Prolactin, Growth Hormone, Insulin-Like Growth Factor-I, and Thyroid Hormones in Lymphocyte Development and Function: Insights from Genetic Models of Hormone and Hormone Receptor Deficiency1

Kenneth Dorshkind and Nelson D. Horseman

Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine and The Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center (K.D.), University of California at Los Angeles School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California 90095-1732; and Department of Molecular and Cellular Physiology and Shriners Burns Institute (N.D.H.), University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio 45267-0576

An extensive literature suggesting that PRL, GH, IGF-I, and thyroid hormones play an important role in immunity has evolved. Because the use of one or more of these hormones as immunostimulants in humans is being considered, it is of critical importance to resolve their precise role in immunity. This review addresses new experimental evidence from analysis of lymphocyte development and function in mice with genetic defects in expression of these hormones or their receptors that calls into question the presumed role played by some of these hormones and reveals unexpected effects of others. These recent findings from the mutant mouse models are integrated and placed in context of the wider literature on endocrine-immune system interactions. The hypothesis that will be developed is that, with the exception of a role for thyroid hormones in B cell development, PRL, GH, and IGF-I are not obligate immunoregulators. Instead, they apparently act as anabolic and stress-modulating hormones in most cells, including those of the immune system.







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Copyright © 2000 by The Endocrine Society