| Literature DB >> 23609496 |
Antonio Carrillo-Vico1, Patricia J Lardone, Nuria Alvarez-Sánchez, Ana Rodríguez-Rodríguez, Juan M Guerrero.
Abstract
Melatonin modulates a wide range of physiological functions with pleiotropic effects on the immune system. Despite the large number of reports implicating melatonin as an immunomodulatory compound, it still remains unclear how melatonin regulates immunity. While some authors argue that melatonin is an immunostimulant, many studies have also described anti-inflammatory properties. The data reviewed in this paper support the idea of melatonin as an immune buffer, acting as a stimulant under basal or immunosuppressive conditions or as an anti-inflammatory compound in the presence of exacerbated immune responses, such as acute inflammation. The clinical relevance of the multiple functions of melatonin under different immune conditions, such as infection, autoimmunity, vaccination and immunosenescence, is also reviewed.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23609496 PMCID: PMC3645767 DOI: 10.3390/ijms14048638
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Distribution and role of melatonin receptors in the immune system. BALT: bronchus-associated lymphoid tissue; IL: interleukin; IP3: inositol triphosphate; PBMCs: peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Empty spaces indicate unknown function.
| Receptor | Distribution | Effector mechanism | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MT1 | Human PBMCs | Regulation of IL-2 production | [ | |
| Different subsets of human T lymphocytes, B cells and monocytes | [ | |||
| Jurkat (human T cells) | Regulation of IL-2 production and IL-2R (CD25) levels | [ | ||
| U937 (human monocyte cells) | [ | |||
| Mouse thymus | [ | |||
| Mouse spleen | [ | |||
| Mouse peritoneal macrophages | Regulation of cAMP levels | [ | ||
| Rat thymus | [ | |||
| Rat spleen | [ | |||
| Rat B cells | [ | |||
| Rat CD4+, CD8+ and CD4+ CD8+ thymocytes | [ | |||
| RBL-2H3 (rat mast cells) | [ | |||
| Spleen of palm squirrel | Regulation of organ weight | [ | ||
| Thymus of palm squirrel | Regulation of thymocyte proliferation | [ | ||
| PBMCs of palm squirrel | [ | |||
| BALT of quail | ||||
| MT2 | Jurkat | [ | ||
| Mouse thymus | [ | |||
| Mouse splenocytes | Increased proliferation | [ | ||
| Rat thymus | [ | |||
| Rat spleen | [ | |||
| Rat leukocytes | Inhibition of leukocyte rolling | [ | ||
| RBL-2H3 | [ | |||
| Chicken spleen | Regulation of splenocyte proliferation | [ | ||
| Chicken thymus | [ | |||
| Chicken lymphocytes | [ | |||
| BALT of quail | [ | |||
| Spleen of quail | [ | |||
| MT1/MT2 | Human PBMCs | Inhibition of TNFα-induced apoptosis | [ | |
| RZRα | Human PBMCs, including different subsets of T lymphocytes, B cells and monocytes | [ | ||
| Jurkat | [ | |||
| RPMI 1788 and P16 (human B cells) | Repression of 5-LOX expression | [ | ||
| HL-60 (promyelocytes) | [ | |||
| Mono Mac 6 (monocytes) | [ | |||
| RORα | Human PBMCs | [ | ||
| Human cytotoxic T lymphocytes [RORα1] | [ | |||
| Human PBMCs, including different subsets of T lymphocytes, B cells and monocytes [RORα2] | [ | |||
| Jurkat [RORα1, RORα2, RORα3] | [ | |||
| U937 [RORα1, RORα2] | Regulation of IL-6 production | [ | ||
| RPMI 1788 and P16 [RORα2, RORα3] | [ | |||
| HL-60 [RORα2, RORα3] | [ | |||
| Mono Mac 6 [RORα2, RORα3] | [ | |||
| Mouse thymus and spleen | [ | |||
| RZR/ROR | Human PBMCs | Regulation of IL-2 and IL-6 production and of IL-2R (CD25) | [ | |
| Jurkat | Regulation of IL-2 production | [ | ||
| U937 | Regulation of IL-6 production | [ |
In vivo effects of melatonin under basal and immunosuppressed conditions.
| Immune condition | Melatonin effects | Melatonin administration | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basal | Increases lymphocyte counts and the blastogenic stimulation ratio of spleen and thymus Increases cellularity in thymus and spleen | 25 mg/kg to adult male squirrels for 60 consecutive days during May–June | [ |
| Basal | Splenic hypertrophy and extramedullary hematopoiesis | 25 mg/kg to adult male Syrian hamsters kept under a long photoperiod | [ |
| Basal | Increase in cell numbers of macrophages/microglia and upregulation of MHC and CD4 antigens | Multiple daily injections of melatonin in the pineal gland and different regions of 1-day-old rat brains for 7–11 days | [ |
| Basal | Increases bone marrow NK cells and monocytes | Daily administration through diet (7–14 days) to young adult male mice | [ |
| Basal | Increases neutrophil chemotactic response to a physiological chemoattractant and the expression of intracellular chemokines | 20 mg daily to human volunteers | [ |
| Basal | Increases in splenocyte proliferation and IL-2 and IL-1β levels | 500 mg/kg to young mice | [ |
| Aging-induced immunosuppression | Reverses thymic and splenic involution, total numbers of thymocytes and splenocytes, mitogen responsiveness and NK cell activity | 15 mg/kg in drinking water to 22-month-old female C57BL mice for 60 consecutive days | [ |
| Aging-induced immunosuppression | Increases humoral response (IgG1 and IgM levels) | Subcutaneous injection of 10 mg/kg for 7 days to 28-month-old male Wistar rats | [ |
| Aging-induced immunosuppression | Increases total leukocyte and lymphocyte counts, mitogenic response of splenocytes and delayed type hypersensitivity response | Daily subcutaneous administration of 0.25 mg/kg to squirrels | [ |
| Aging-induced immunosuppression | Increases B cell proliferation and Th1 cytokines and decreases Th2 response | Injection of old (16.5 months) female C57BL/6 mice | [ |
| Immunosenescence induced by aging plus ovariectomy | Restores impaired chemotaxis, mitogenic response, IL-2 release and NK cell activity | 1 mg/kg in drinking water to Wistar albino female rats | [ |
| Dexamethasone-induced immunosuppression | Restores decreased thymus and spleen activities, lymphoid tissues mass, total leukocyte counts and bone marrow and T cell-mediated immune function | 25 mg/kg to adult squirrels along with dexamethasone for 60 consecutive days | [ |
| Dexamethasone-induced immunosuppression | Enhances IL-2 production and thymic and splenic lymphocyte proliferation by membrane receptor-mediated mechanism | Daily subcutaneous administration of 0.25 mg/kg to squirrels during evening hours | [ |
| Corticosterone-induced immunosuppression | Antagonizes the depression of antibody production | Evening injections to mice | [ |
| Immunosuppression due to propranolol- and PCPA-induced pineal inactivation | Reverses the suppression of the humoral response and autologous mixed lymphocyte reaction | Evening injections to mice | [ |
| Immunosuppression by trauma-hemorrhage | Improves reduced IL-1, IL-2 and IL-6 release and splenocyte proliferative capacity | Subcutaneous injection of 10 mg/kg in the evening of the day of surgery (soft-tissue trauma and hemorrhagic shock) and on the following evening in C3H/HeN mice | [ |
| Lead-induced immunotoxicity | Increases thymus weight and splenic T and B cell and NK, T and B cell functions | 10 or 50 mg/kg orally administered to ICR mice daily for 28 days, 2 h before Pb treatment | [ |
PCPA: p-chlorophenylalanine; Pb: lead; Ref: reference.
In vivo effects of melatonin on inflammatory conditions.
| Inflammatory condition | Melatonin effects | Molecular mechanism | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exercise-induced cardiac inflammatory injury | Reduces TNF-α, IL-1β and IL-6 production | [ | ||
| Experimental colitis | Counteracts the high production of TNF-α, IL-1 and NO | Downregulation of NF-κB | [ | |
| Diabetes-associated low-grade inflammation | Lowers TNF-α, IL-6 and CRP | [ | ||
| Experimental model of traumatic brain injury | Reduces upregulation of IL-6, iNOS, SOCS-3 and oxidative stress | Overcomes STAT-1 inactivation | [ | |
| Heatstroke-induced multiple organ dysfunction syndrome | Attenuates high production of TNF-α, IL-1β and IL-6 and promotes IL-10 production | [ | ||
| Ischemia reperfusion-induced liver damage | Attenuates enhanced levels of TNF-α, IL-6 and NO | Suppresses the increase in MyD88, ERK, phosphorylated JNK and c-Jun and nuclear translocation of NF-κB | [ | |
| Neuroinflammation in experimental diabetic neuropathy | Attenuates elevated levels of TNF-α, IL-6, iNOS, COX-2 and oxidative stress | Decreases NF-κB cascade activation | [ | |
| FK506-induced nephropathy | Lowers TNF-α, IL-6 and NO levels | [ | ||
| Acetic acid-induced colitis | Reverses increased levels of TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, MPO and oxidative stress | [ | ||
| Cerulein-induced pancreatitis | Reduces expression of TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8 and iNOS | Inhibition of elevated nuclear binding of NF-κB | [ | |
| Hemorrhagic shock | Suppresses the release of TNF-α and IL-6 | [ | ||
| DMN-induced liver injury | Decreases expression of TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6 and iNOS | Inhibition of increased nuclear binding of NF-κB | [ | |
| Aging | Attenuates increased levels of TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, iNOS and LPO | [ | ||
| Cecal dissection-induced bacterial peritonitis | Lowers levels of TNF-α, IL-6 and MDA | [ | ||
| Pancreatic fluid-induced lung inflammation and airway hyperreactivity | Reduces TNF-α and iNOS concentrations | [ | ||
| TNBS-induced colitis | Decreases high levels of TNF-α, IL-1 and NO | NF-κB inhibition and blockade of IκBα degradation | [ | |
| Neuro-inflammation induced by intra-cerebroventricular administration of LPS | Decreases TNF-α, IL-1β and oxidative stress | [ | ||
| Experimental periodontitis | Reduces TNF-α, IL-1β and MDA | [ | ||
| DNBS-induced colon injury | Reduces expression of TNF-α and MMP-9 and MMP-2 activities | Reduction in NF-κB activation and phosphorylation of c-Jun | [ | |
| Taurocholate-induced acute pancreatitis | Reduces TNF-α and amylase levels | [ | ||
| Reverses increased levels of TNF-α and MDA | [ | |||
| Spinal cord injury | Decreases expression of TNF-α and MMP-9 and MMP-2 | [ | ||
| Lung ischemia-reperfusion injury | Diminishes levels of TNF-α | Inhibition of NF-κB protein levels | [ | |
| Hypoxia-induced retinal ganglion cell death | Reverses the upregulation of TNF-α, IL-1β and LPO | [ | ||
| Mechlorethamine-induced nephrotoxicity | Ameliorates the increased production of TNF-α and IL-1β | [ | ||
| Immunological liver injury | Attenuates the increases in TNF-α and IL-1β | [ | ||
| Radiation-induced lung injury | Reduces TNF-α, TGF-1 and oxidative stress | [ | ||
| Maternal LPS-induced inflammation | Attenuates elevation of TNF-α in maternal serum and fetal brain | [ | ||
| Indomethacin-induced chronic gastric ulcer | Blocks expression of TNF-α, IL-1β and IL-8 | Inhibition of ERK and JNK phosphorylation and NF-κB, c-Fos and c-Jun expression | [ | |
| Alzheimer’s transgenic mice | Decreases TNF-α levels in hippocampus | [ | ||
| Infant endotracheal intubation | Lowers IL-6, IL-8, IL-10 and IL-12 | [ | ||
| Strenuous exercise | Prevents overexpression of TNF-α, IL-6, IL-1ra and oxidative stress | [ | ||
| Duchenne muscular dystrophy | Reduces levels of TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-2, IFN-γ and oxidative stress | [ | ||
| Respiratory distress syndrome | Limits serum rise in TNF-α, IL-6 and IL-8 | [ |
CRP: C-reactive protein; MPO: myeloperoxidase; NO: nitric oxide; DMN: dimethylnitrosamine; TNBS: 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid; DNBS: dinitrobenzene sulfonic acid; empty spaces indicate unknown molecular mechanisms.
Scheme 1Melatonin in immune intervention.
Scheme 2Comprehensive graphic scheme depicting how melatonin buffers the immune system.