Rosenne Ella, Sorski Liat, Shaashua Lee, Neeman Elad, Matzner Pini, Levi Ben, Ben-Eliyahu Shamgar
Neuroimmunology Research Unit, Department of Psychology, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Neuroimmunology Research Unit, Department of Psychology, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Brain Behav Immun. 2014 Mar;37:207-19. doi: 10.1016/j.bbi.2013.12.007. Epub 2013 Dec 12.
Most in vitro and ex-vivo studies indicate a profound suppression of NK cell cytotoxicity (NKCC) by glucocorticoids; while catecholamines and prostaglandins were reported both to suppress and to enhance NKCC. However, methodological considerations hinder our ability to deduce from these findings to the impact of endogenous release of these factors on in vivo levels of NKCC and their implications to NK-dependent resistance to pathologies in living humans or animals. Here we used an in vivo approach that sensitively and specifically reflects NKCC in living F344 rats, based on lung clearance of NK-sensitive tumor cells (MADB106), and based on comparing effects between NK-intact and NK-depleted rats. To study the role of corticosterone, epinephrine, and prostaglandins, we administered these factors to rats, or antagonized their endogenous release following different stress paradigms or surgery. The results indicated that endogenous or exogenous elevated corticosterone levels can suppress in vivo NKCC levels, but only under some conditions, and mostly secondarily to the NK-suppressing impact of epinephrine. Specifically, corticosterone-induced NKCC suppression occurred (i) only under prolonged, but not short exposure to stress, and mainly in males; (ii) was smaller than the prominent impact of epinephrine; (iii) was mostly ascribed to corticosterone-induced potentiation of the effects of epinephrine or/and prostaglandins; and (iv) was completely abolished through antagonizing epinephrine or/and prostaglandins. Overall, these findings markedly limit the significance of stress/surgery-induced corticosterone release in the in vivo suppression of NKCC, and highlight the blockade of epinephrine or/and prostaglandins as effective and clinically feasible approaches to overcome such immuno-suppressive effects.
大多数体外和离体研究表明,糖皮质激素可显著抑制自然杀伤细胞细胞毒性(NKCC);而儿茶酚胺和前列腺素据报道既能抑制也能增强NKCC。然而,方法学上的考虑因素阻碍了我们从这些研究结果推断这些因素内源性释放对体内NKCC水平的影响以及它们对活体人类或动物NK依赖性疾病抵抗力的影响。在此,我们采用了一种体内方法,该方法基于NK敏感肿瘤细胞(MADB106)的肺清除率,并通过比较NK完整和NK耗竭大鼠之间的效应,灵敏且特异地反映活体F344大鼠中的NKCC。为了研究皮质酮、肾上腺素和前列腺素的作用,我们将这些因素给予大鼠,或在不同应激模式或手术后拮抗它们的内源性释放。结果表明,内源性或外源性升高的皮质酮水平可抑制体内NKCC水平,但仅在某些条件下,且主要继发于肾上腺素的NK抑制作用。具体而言,皮质酮诱导的NKCC抑制发生在:(i)仅在长期而非短期应激暴露下,且主要在雄性大鼠中;(ii)小于肾上腺素的显著影响;(iii)主要归因于皮质酮诱导的肾上腺素或/和前列腺素效应的增强;(iv)通过拮抗肾上腺素或/和前列腺素可完全消除。总体而言,这些发现显著限制了应激/手术诱导的皮质酮释放在体内抑制NKCC中的意义,并强调拮抗肾上腺素或/和前列腺素是克服这种免疫抑制作用的有效且临床可行的方法。