Gimsa Ulrike, Tuchscherer Margret, Kanitz Ellen
Psychophysiology Unit, Institute of Behavioural Physiology, Leibniz Institute for Farm Animal Biology (FBN), Dummerstorf, Germany.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2018 Apr 3;12:64. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2018.00064. eCollection 2018.
Psychosocial stress may impair immune functions and provoke the development of pathologies. The underlying communication between the brain and the immune system is being studied predominantly in rodents. However, pigs offer several advantages as preclinical models for humans because pigs are more similar to humans than rodents in many anatomical and physiological characteristics. Unlike in rodents, the main stress-induced glucocorticoid in humans and pigs is cortisol with a similar circadian rhythm. In this study, we summarize data on short-term and long-term effects of social stress in pigs for their immunity and neuroendocrine regulation with consequences for their health and well-being. As typical social stressors, regrouping, crowding, social isolation, and maternal deprivation have been studied. Psychosocial stress in pigs may affect various reactions of innate and adaptive immunity, such as leukocyte distribution, cytokine secretion, lymphocyte proliferation, and antibody production as well as immune responses to viral infection or vaccination. Furthermore, social stress may induce or promote gastrointestinal diseases through dysregulation of inflammatory processes. In piglets, psychosocial stress may also result in glucocorticoid resistance of lymphocytes, which has been discussed as a cause of allergic asthma in humans. Stress-related neuroendocrine alterations in the cortico-limbic structures, such as the prefrontal cortex, amygdala, hippocampus and hypothalamus, have been demonstrated in pigs at different ages. Based on these data, we propose using pigs as models for psychosocial stress in humans to study the mechanisms of brain-to-immune and immune-to-brain communication from the systemic level down to the cellular and subcellular levels.
心理社会压力可能会损害免疫功能并引发疾病的发展。大脑与免疫系统之间的潜在沟通主要在啮齿动物中进行研究。然而,猪作为人类临床前模型具有几个优势,因为在许多解剖学和生理学特征方面,猪比啮齿动物更接近人类。与啮齿动物不同,人类和猪中主要的应激诱导糖皮质激素是皮质醇,其昼夜节律相似。在本研究中,我们总结了关于猪社会压力对其免疫和神经内分泌调节的短期和长期影响的数据,以及这些影响对其健康和福祉的后果。作为典型的社会应激源,重新分组、拥挤、社会隔离和母婴剥夺已被研究。猪的心理社会压力可能会影响先天免疫和适应性免疫的各种反应,如白细胞分布、细胞因子分泌、淋巴细胞增殖和抗体产生,以及对病毒感染或疫苗接种的免疫反应。此外,社会压力可能通过炎症过程失调诱导或促进胃肠道疾病。在仔猪中,心理社会压力还可能导致淋巴细胞的糖皮质激素抵抗,这被认为是人类过敏性哮喘的一个原因。在不同年龄段的猪中,已经证明了皮质-边缘结构(如前额叶皮质、杏仁核、海马体和下丘脑)中与压力相关的神经内分泌改变。基于这些数据,我们建议将猪用作人类心理社会压力的模型,以研究从系统水平到细胞和亚细胞水平的脑-免疫和免疫-脑沟通机制。