Literature DB >> 10741900

Phenotypic and functional assessments of immune status in the rat spleen following acute heroin treatment.

K Fecho1, C J Nelson, D T Lysle.   

Abstract

Heroin use is associated with an increased incidence of several types of infections, including HIV. Yet few studies have assessed whether heroin produces pharmacological alterations of immune status that might contribute to the increased rate of infections amongst heroin users. The present study investigated whether a single administration of heroin to rats produces dose-dependent alterations in functional measures of immune status and in the distribution of leukocyte subsets in the spleen. The results showed that heroin produces a dose-dependent, naltrexone-reversible suppression of the concanavalin A-stimulated proliferation of T cells, lipopolysaccharide-stimulated proliferation of B cells, production of interferon-gamma and cytotoxicity of natural killer (NK) cells in the spleen. Heroin's suppressive effect on NK cell activity results in part from a heroin-induced decrease in the relative number of NKR-P1A(hi) CD3- NK cells in the spleen. Heroin also decreases the percent of a splenic granulocyte subset, the CD11b/c+ HIS48(hi) cells, whose function currently is unknown. In contrast, heroin does not alter relative numbers of CD4+ CD3+ T cells, CD8+ CD3+ T cells, CD45+ B cells, NKR-P1A(lo) CD3+ T cells, CD11b/c+ ED1+ (or CD11b/c+ HIS48-) monocytes/macrophages or CD11b/c+ ED1- (or CD11b/c+ HIS48+) total granulocytes in the spleen. Collectively, these findings demonstrate that heroin produces pharmacological effects on functional and phenotypic measures of immune status.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10741900     DOI: 10.1016/s0162-3109(99)00175-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Immunopharmacology        ISSN: 0162-3109


  7 in total

1.  Expression of a heroin contextually conditioned immune effect in male rats requires CaMKIIα-expressing neurons in dorsal, but not ventral, subiculum and hippocampal CA1.

Authors:  Christina L Lebonville; Jacqueline E Paniccia; Shveta V Parekh; Lynde M Wangler; Meghan E Jones; Rita A Fuchs; Donald T Lysle
Journal:  Brain Behav Immun       Date:  2020-07-24       Impact factor: 7.217

2.  Conditioned effects of heroin on the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase in the rat are susceptible to extinction and latent inhibition.

Authors:  Jennifer L Szczytkowski; Donald T Lysle
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2007-01-09       Impact factor: 4.530

Review 3.  Neuroimmune mechanisms of psychostimulant and opioid use disorders.

Authors:  Rebecca S Hofford; Scott J Russo; Drew D Kiraly
Journal:  Eur J Neurosci       Date:  2018-09-26       Impact factor: 3.386

4.  Dopamine D1 receptors within the basolateral amygdala mediate heroin-induced conditioned immunomodulation.

Authors:  Jennifer L Szczytkowski; Donald T Lysle
Journal:  J Neuroimmunol       Date:  2010-06-03       Impact factor: 3.478

5.  Evidence for the nucleus accumbens as a neural substrate of heroin-induced immune alterations.

Authors:  Timothy B Saurer; Stephanie G Ijames; Donald T Lysle
Journal:  J Pharmacol Exp Ther       Date:  2009-03-03       Impact factor: 4.030

6.  Effects of Different Concentrations of Opium on the Secretion of Interleukin-6, Interferon-γ and Transforming Growth Factor Beta Cytokines from Jurkat Cells.

Authors:  Gholamreza Asadikaram; Somayeh Igder; Zahra Jamali; Nader Shahrokhi; Hamid Najafipour; Mostafa Shokoohi; Abdollah Jafarzadeh; Mohammad Kazemi-Arababadi
Journal:  Addict Health       Date:  2015 Winter-Spring

7.  Opium induces apoptosis in jurkat cells.

Authors:  Somayeh Igder; Gholam Reza Asadikaram; Farzaneh Sheykholeslam; Ahmad Reza Sayadi; Mehdi Mahmoodi; Mohammad Kazemi Arababadi; Mohammad Javad Rasaee
Journal:  Addict Health       Date:  2013 Winter-Spring
  7 in total

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