"We
believe that in many situations of acute stress, the body prepares
the immune system for challenges such as wounds or infections,"
Dhabhar said. "Immune function may actually be boosted under these
conditions. The immune system may respond to warning signals -
such as stress hormones - that the brain sends out during stress.
These signals prepare the body to deal with the consequences of
stress."
Dhabhar and his colleagues studied the role of gamma interferon
in regulating the immune-enhancing effects of stress. Gamma interferon
is one of a group of immune system hormones called cytokines.
Cytokines regulate immune responses.
"They
call troops (immune cells) to the site of the invasion, then orchestrate
an immune response at the site of the battle," Dhabhar said. He
added that gamma interferon is vital for summoning and activating
immune cells to the site of immune reactions.
The researchers predicted that if gamma interferon was important
for regulating the stress-induced enhancement of the skin's immunity,
then removing the hormone from the system would eliminate these
stress-induced enhancement effects.
They examined the effects of stress on the immune response of
mice that had normal gamma interferon function and mice that had
deficient gamma interferon function.
To test each animal's immune response following short-stress,
the researchers shaved a small patch of fur from each mouse's
back. The researchers then applied a substance to each of the
shaved areas. The substance, dinitro fluorobenzene (DNFB), mimics
an immune response like that seen during a skin test for tuberculosis.
A week later, half of the mice were restrained in small wire mesh
containers for two-and-a-half hours, while the other half were
left undisturbed in their cages.
"Restraint
stress is thought to be mostly psychological," Dhabhar said. "It
may trigger a response similar to the collapse of an animal's
burrow - the mice perceive confinement and become stressed."
After the restraint period, the researchers applied DNFB to the
right ear of each mouse in the study. Ear lobe thickness had been
measured at the beginning of the experiment. Measurements were
taken every day for eight days after DNFB was applied to gauge
the extent of the infection - just like a physician measures the
increase in diameter of a tuberculin skin reaction.
The researchers noted a sizable increase in ear thickness in the
stressed mice that had normal gamma interferon. By the second
day after the restraining period, the right ears in these mice
had swelled to an average of 60 percent larger than their initial
size. This meant that more immune system cells were arriving at
the site where the DNFB had been applied, thereby enhancing the
DTH response. This translates to an enhanced response to acute
stress, the researchers said. By comparison, the ear size of the
mice that were not stressed increased only about 30 percent by
the second day.
In contrast, mice lacking gamma interferon did not have the same
immune response. Of the mice in this group that were stressed,
ear size increased to about a maximum of 35 percent of the original
size. The ear thickness of the non-stressed mice in this group
increased by about 25 percent.
"The
stressed mice with normal gamma interferon function showed a significant
enhancement of the skin's immune response after the DNFB was applied
to their ears," Dhabhar said. "The mice that lacked gamma interferon
function failed to show the same immune-enhancing effects of acute
stress.
"The
absence of gamma interferon was very noticeable following the
restraining period and the application of the antigen," Dhabhar
said. "The lack of gamma interferon seemed to eliminate the stress-induced
enhancement of the skin's DTH response."
Dhabhar co-authored the study with Abhay Satoskar and John David,
both with the department of immunology and infectious diseases
at the Harvard School of Public Health; Horst Bluethmann, of F.
Hoffmann L-Roche AG, Switzerland; and Bruce McEwen, of the laboratory
of neuroendocrinology at Rockefeller University.
A grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
supported this research.
Editor's
Note:
The original news release on short-term stress and the immune
system can be found at www.osu.edu.
Note:
This story on short-term stress and the immune system has been
adapted from a news release issued by Ohio State University for
journalists and other members of the public. If you wish to quote
from any part of this story, please credit Ohio State University
as the original source. The story was taken from Science Daily,
www.sciencedaily.com.
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