Literature DB >> 8597419

The protective role of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis against lethality produced by immune, infectious, and inflammatory stress.

L P Kapcala1, T Chautard, R L Eskay.   

Abstract

We have shown that ADX and HYPOX rats exhibit a markedly increased sensitivity to the lethal effects of IL-1-beta and LPS compared to sham controls with an intact HPAA. These results indicated that the reports of lethal effects of cytokines and LPS which generates cytokines in mice with a compromised HPAA were not idiosyncratic or specific to mice but represented a general response that would have been expected in any organism with a compromised HPAA. We further demonstrated that protection against lethal effects due to IL-1-beta or LPS could be produced by treating ADX rats with glucocorticoid in a quantity estimated to be equivalent to corticosterone secretion provoked during stress. In contrast, we found that acutely stalk-sectioned rats with pituitaries disconnected from hypothalamic regulation did not show a markedly increased susceptibility to lethal effects of LPS as did ADX or HYPOX rats. Although a minority of stalk-sectioned rats were killed by LPS, the majority of rats were protected from lethal actions of LPS. This response suggested that an intact pituitary-adrenal axis without the normal hypothalamic control could still provide significant protection presumably due to generation of cytokines which stimulated the pituitary over several hours. The results from our lethality studies clearly underscore the importance of activating the stress axis and increasing glucocorticoid secretion to protect against potentially lethal effects of cytokines that can be induced by immune, infectious, or inflammatory stimuli. Cytokine-stimulated effects can initially result in beneficial actions to the host by promoting immune/inflammatory responses that are protective in nature and help defend against a variety of invading stimuli (infectious, immune, inflammatory, traumatic, neoplastic). Normally the HPAA responds to cytokine stimulation by ultimately increasing glucocorticoid secretion in order to counterregulate cytokine actions, modulate the host response, and protect the host from excessively catabolic effects of unregulated cytokine generation and actions. For many years, clinicians have recognized that patients with deficient glucocorticoid secretion (e.g., Addison's disease or pituitary ACTH deficiency) require increased glucocorticoid replacement during episodes of fever, infection, or inflammatory stress. However, the reasons why stress-equivalent glucocorticoid replacement were required were not entirely clear. Now, we understand that glucocorticoids are critically important for protecting the host against its own defense mechanisms so that the stimulation of cytokines can facilitate a protective response against an invading insult without also killing the host.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 8597419     DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1995.tb44699.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci        ISSN: 0077-8923            Impact factor:   5.691


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