Salvin S B, Horecker B L, Pan L X, Rabin B S
Clin Immunol Immunopathol. 1987 Jun;43(3):281-8. doi: 10.1016/0090-1229(87)90137-1.
Mice of the RF/J strain on a normal diet are defective in some aspects of cellular immunity, as evidenced by their susceptibility to infection with Candida albicans, their failure to release detectable quantities of circulating migration inhibitory factor (MIF) in vivo, and the presence of a low rate of phagocytosis and killing by peritoneal macrophages. When the mice were fed a high-zinc diet (300 ppm) for 4 weeks and then treated daily with 160 ng prothymosin alpha, an increase occurred in resistance to infection with C. albicans, in the capacity to release MIF in vivo into the circulation and in the capacity of peritoneal macrophages to engulf (phagocytose) and kill cells of C. krusei. In addition, the number of spleen lymphocytes producing antibody to a T-dependent antigen was significantly increased in the mice fed a high-zinc diet and inoculated daily with prothymosin alpha.