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Hypothyroidism in Noninterferon Treated-HCV Infected Individuals Is Associated with Abnormalities in the Regulation of Th17 Cells
Author(s) -
Luis A. Salazar,
Xóchitl García-Samper,
Rafael Suarez-Carpio,
María del Carmen Jiménez Martínez,
Erika P. RendónHuerta,
Felipe A. Massó,
Teresa I. Fortoul van der Goes,
Luis F. Montaño
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
hepatitis research and treatment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-1372
pISSN - 2090-1364
DOI - 10.1155/2010/971095
Subject(s) - medicine , interleukin 10 , antibody , secretion , cardiolipin , endocrinology , immunology , group b , interleukin 17 , cytokine , group a , biology , biochemistry , phospholipid , membrane
HCV-Ag-specific TH17 cells secrete IL17, a cytokine involved in autoimmune diseases and regulated by IL10 and TGF-b. 5–12% of patients with chronic HCV infection have hypothyroidism. We evaluated the role of these cytokines in this patients by determining serum concentration of TsH, T3, free T4, IL2, IL10, IL12, IL17, TGF-b, anti-TG, TPO, CCP, GBM, and cardiolipin antibodies in 87 chronically noninterferon treated HCV-infected patients. 20 patients (group A) had elevated TsH values (>5  μ UI/ml) whereas the remaining 67 (group B) had normal values. The percentage of anti-TPO, TG, GBM, and cardiolipin antibodies in group A patients (33%, 41%, 5% and 5%, resp.) as well as IL17, IL2 and TGF-b concentrations (25 ± 23 pg/ml, 643 ± 572 pg/ml, and 618 ± 221 pg/ml, resp.) were significantly higher than group B. Abnormal Th17 regulation mediated by IL-2 and low TGF-b concentrations is associated with hypothyroidism in chronically-infected HCV patients.

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