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1.
PLoS One ; 19(8): e0309478, 2024.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39197060

RÉSUMÉ

Steroid hormones are important modulators of many physiological processes, and measurements of steroids in blood, saliva, and urine matrices are widely used to assess endocrine pathologies and stress. However, these matrices cannot be used to retrospectively assess early-life stress and developmental endocrine pathologies, because they do not integrate steroid levels over the long term. A novel biological matrix in which to measure steroids is primary teeth (or "baby teeth"). Primary teeth develop early in life and accumulate various endogenous molecules during their gradual formation. Here, we developed and validated the first assay to measure steroids in human primary teeth using liquid chromatography-tandem spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Our assay is highly sensitive, specific, accurate, and precise. It allows for the simultaneous quantification of 17 steroids in primary teeth (16 of which have not been examined previously in primary teeth). Overall, steroid levels in primary teeth were relatively low, and 8 steroids were quantifiable. Levels of dehydroepiandrosterone, cortisol, and progesterone were the highest of the 17 steroids examined. Next, we used this assay to perform steroid profiling in primary teeth from males and females. The same 8 steroids were quantifiable, and no sex differences were found. Levels of androgens (androstenedione and testosterone) were positively correlated, and levels of glucocorticoids (cortisol, cortisone, corticosterone, 11-dehydrocorticosterone) were also positively correlated. These data demonstrate that multiple steroids can be quantified by LC-MS/MS in human primary teeth, and this method potentially provides a powerful new way to retrospectively assess early-life stress and developmental endocrine pathologies.


Sujet(s)
Stéroïdes , Spectrométrie de masse en tandem , Dent de lait , Humains , Spectrométrie de masse en tandem/méthodes , Dent de lait/composition chimique , Dent de lait/métabolisme , Mâle , Femelle , Chromatographie en phase liquide/méthodes , Études rétrospectives , Stéroïdes/analyse , Stéroïdes/métabolisme , Enfant , Enfant d'âge préscolaire
2.
GMS Hyg Infect Control ; 19: Doc21, 2024.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38766639

RÉSUMÉ

Aim: Seasonal influenza poses a significant burden of disease, affecting not only older adults but also individuals under the age of 60. It carries a high economic burden, mainly driven by influenza-associated productivity losses in the working population. Conventional egg-based influenza vaccines may have reduced effectiveness due to antigen adaptation in eggs. In contrast, cell-based influenza vaccines are less likely to be affected by such antigen adaptation. This review aims to present real-world data (RWD) comparing the effectiveness of quadrivalent cell-based (QIVc) and egg-based (QIVe) influenza vaccines over three consecutive seasons. Methods: A comprehensive review was conducted, analyzing RWD from retrospective cohort and case-control studies on the relative vaccine effectiveness (rVE) of QIVc versus QIVe during the 2017/18-2019/20 seasons. Results: This study included six retrospective cohort studies and one case-control study, with a combined total of approximately 29 million participants. A cohort study involving people aged ≥4 years during the 2017/18 season showed a statistically significant rVE of QIVc compared to QIVe in preventing influenza-like illness, with a value of 36.2%. QIVc demonstrated statistically significant superiority over QIVe in preventing outpatient and inpatient medical encounters as observed in two cohort studies conducted during the 2018/19 and 2019/20 seasons. The rVE of QIVc compared to QIVe was found to be 7.6% in individuals aged ≥4 years and 9.5% in individuals aged ≥18 years. Three additional cohort studies conducted between 2017/18-2019/20 reported a statistically significant improvement in rVE (5.3-14.4%) of QIVc compared to QIVe in preventing influenza-related hospitalizations and emergency department visits due to influenza in individuals aged 4-64 years. In a case-control study across all three seasons, QIVc showed statistically significantly higher effectiveness compared to QIVe in preventing test-confirmed influenza, with rVEs of 10.0-14.8%. Conclusions: RWD from the 2017/18-2019/20 seasons demonstrated that QIVc is more effective than QIVe in preventing influenza-related outcomes in individuals aged 4-64 years. Preferential use of cell-based influenza vaccines, as opposed to conventional egg-based vaccines, could reduce the burden of influenza-related symptoms on individuals and alleviate the economic impact on the German population under 60 years of age.

3.
Wien Klin Wochenschr ; 136(Suppl 2): 35-42, 2024 Feb.
Article de Allemand | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38393348

RÉSUMÉ

The population < 60 years of age is also affected by a significant disease burden from seasonal influenza. It carries a high economic burden, mainly driven by influenza-associated productivity losses in the working population. Conventional egg-based influenza vaccines may experience reduced effectiveness due to antigen adaptation in eggs. In contrast, cell-based influenza vaccines are less likely to be affected by antigenic adaptations to the host system and showed better effectiveness in individuals 4-64 years old over several seasons compared to conventional egg-based influenza vaccines under real-world conditions. Preferential use of cell-based influenza vaccines, as opposed to conventional egg-based vaccines, could reduce the burden of influenza-related symptoms on individuals and alleviate the economic impact on the German population < 60 years of age.


Sujet(s)
Vaccins antigrippaux , Grippe humaine , Humains , Enfant d'âge préscolaire , Enfant , Adolescent , Jeune adulte , Adulte , Adulte d'âge moyen , Grippe humaine/prévention et contrôle , Grippe humaine/épidémiologie , Vaccination , Saisons , Coûts indirects de la maladie
4.
J Endocrinol ; 251(3): 161-180, 2021 11 05.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34582358

RÉSUMÉ

Maternal diets can have dramatic effects on the physiology, metabolism, and behaviour of offspring that persist into adulthood. However, the effects of maternal sucrose consumption on offspring remain unclear. Here, female rats were fed either a sucrose diet with a human-relevant level of sucrose (25% of kcal) or a macronutrient-matched, isocaloric control diet before, during, and after pregnancy. After weaning, all offspring were fed a standard low-sucrose rodent chow. We measured indicators of metabolism (weight, adipose, glucose tolerance, and liver lipids) during development and adulthood (16-24 weeks). We also measured food preference and motivation for sugar rewards in adulthood. Finally, in brain regions regulating these behaviours, we measured steroids and transcripts for steroidogenic enzymes, steroid receptors, and dopamine receptors. In male offspring, maternal sucrose intake decreased body mass and visceral adipose tissue, increased preference for high-sucrose and high-fat diets, increased motivation for sugar rewards, and decreased mRNA levels of Cyp17a1 (an androgenic enzyme) in the nucleus accumbens. In female offspring, maternal sucrose intake increased basal corticosterone levels. These data demonstrate the enduring, diverse, and sex-specific effects of maternal sucrose consumption on offspring phenotype.


Sujet(s)
Comportement animal/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Encéphale/métabolisme , Phénomènes physiologiques nutritionnels prénatals , Stéroïdes/métabolisme , Saccharose/administration et posologie , Aliment pour animaux , Animaux , Marqueurs biologiques , Comportement de choix/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Régime alimentaire , Métabolisme énergétique/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Métabolisme énergétique/physiologie , Femelle , Régulation de l'expression des gènes/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Grossesse , ARN messager/génétique , ARN messager/métabolisme , Répartition aléatoire , Rats , Récepteurs dopaminergiques/génétique , Récepteurs dopaminergiques/métabolisme , Récepteurs aux stéroïdes/génétique , Récepteurs aux stéroïdes/métabolisme
5.
J Endocrinol ; 245(2): 231-246, 2020 05.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32112695

RÉSUMÉ

Sucrose consumption is associated with type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and cognitive deficits. Sucrose intake during pregnancy might have particularly prominent effects on metabolic, endocrine, and neural physiology. It remains unclear how consumption of sucrose affects parous females, especially in brain circuits that mediate food consumption and reward processing. Here, we examine whether a human-relevant level of sucrose before, during, and after pregnancy (17-18 weeks total) influences metabolic and neuroendocrine physiology in female rats. Females were fed either a control diet or a macronutrient-matched, isocaloric sucrose diet (25% of kcal from sucrose). Metabolically, sucrose impairs glucose tolerance, increases liver lipids, and increases a marker of adipose inflammation, but has no effect on body weight or overall visceral adiposity. Sucrose also decreases corticosterone levels in serum but not in the brain. Sucrose increases progesterone levels in serum and in the brain and increases the brain:serum ratio of progesterone in the mesocorticolimbic system and hypothalamus. These data suggest a dysregulation of systemic and local steroid signalling. Moreover, sucrose decreases tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), a catecholamine-synthetic enzyme, in the medial prefrontal cortex. Finally, sucrose consumption alters the expression pattern of FOSB, a marker of phasic dopamine signalling, in the nucleus accumbens. Overall, chronic consumption of sucrose at a human-relevant level alters metabolism, steroid levels, and brain dopamine signalling in a female rat model.


Sujet(s)
Encéphale/métabolisme , Corticostérone/métabolisme , Saccharose alimentaire/pharmacologie , Dopamine/métabolisme , Transduction du signal/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Animaux , Consommation alimentaire/physiologie , Femelle , Modèles animaux , Grossesse , Rats
6.
Front Immunol ; 9: 1963, 2018.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30283434

RÉSUMÉ

Ever since the development of the first vaccine more than 200 years ago, vaccinations have greatly decreased the burden of infectious diseases worldwide, famously leading to the eradication of small pox and allowing the restriction of diseases such as polio, tetanus, diphtheria, and measles. A multitude of research efforts focuses on the improvement of established and the discovery of new vaccines such as the HPV (human papilloma virus) vaccine in 2006. However, radical changes in the density, age distribution and traveling habits of the population worldwide as well as the changing climate favor the emergence of old and new pathogens that bear the risk of becoming pandemic threats. In recent years, the rapid spread of severe infections such as HIV, SARS, Ebola, and Zika have highlighted the dire need for global preparedness for pandemics, which necessitates the extremely rapid development and comprehensive distribution of vaccines against potentially previously unknown pathogens. What is more, the emergence of antibiotic resistant bacteria calls for new approaches to prevent infections. Given these changes, established methods for the identification of new vaccine candidates are no longer sufficient to ensure global protection. Hence, new vaccine technologies able to achieve rapid development as well as large scale production are of pivotal importance. This review will discuss viral vector and nucleic acid-based vaccines (DNA and mRNA vaccines) as new approaches that might be able to tackle these challenges to global health.


Sujet(s)
Contrôle des maladies transmissibles/méthodes , Maladies transmissibles/thérapie , Épidémies de maladies/prévention et contrôle , Vaccination/méthodes , Vaccins/immunologie , Animaux , Contrôle des maladies transmissibles/tendances , Maladies transmissibles/épidémiologie , Maladies transmissibles/immunologie , Santé mondiale , Humains , Vaccination/tendances , Vaccins/administration et posologie
7.
Int J Parasitol ; 48(12): 925-935, 2018 10.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30176234

RÉSUMÉ

IL-6 has a wide range of biological activities that includes anti- and pro-inflammatory aspects. In this study, we investigated the role of IL-6 in immune responses to the rodent filarial nematode Litomosoides sigmodontis, a model for human filarial infections. IL-6-/- mice had a significantly increased worm burden after natural infection compared with wild type controls at early time points p.i. Given that the worm burden in IL-6-/- mice was already increased at the time point the infective larvae reached the pleural cavity, immune responses that may facilitate the migration from the site of infection (skin) via the lymphatics to the pleural cavity were analysed. Increased vascular permeability may facilitate larval migration, but blocking of histamine receptors had no effect on worm burden and vascular permeability was similar between IL-6-/- mice and wild type controls. In contrast, blocking mast cell degranulation reduced the worm burden in IL-6-/- mice partially, suggesting that release of mast cell-derived mediators improves larval migration to some degree. Protective immune responses within the skin were involved, as bypassing the skin barrier by inoculating infective L3s subcutaneously resulted in a comparable worm recovery in both mouse strains. Analysis of the cellular composition by flow cytometry and PCR array in the skin after exposure to filarial extract or L3s, respectively, indicate that the absence of IL-6 results in a delayed recruitment of neutrophils and macrophages to the site of initial infection. These results demonstrate that IL-6 is essentially involved in protective immune responses within the skin that impair migration of infective L3s.


Sujet(s)
Filarioses/immunologie , Filarioidea/immunologie , Interleukine-6/métabolisme , Animaux , Mouvement cellulaire , Modèles animaux de maladie humaine , Filarioses/parasitologie , Filarioidea/physiologie , Interleukine-6/déficit , Macrophages/immunologie , Mastocytes/immunologie , Souris , Granulocytes neutrophiles/immunologie , Cavité pleurale/parasitologie , Peau/immunologie , Peau/parasitologie
8.
PLoS One ; 13(2): e0192717, 2018.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29438386

RÉSUMÉ

Malaria ranks among the most important infectious diseases worldwide and affects mostly people living in tropical countries. Mechanisms involved in disease progression are still not fully understood and specific treatments that might interfere with cerebral malaria (CM) are limited. Here we show that administration of doxycycline (DOX) prevented experimental CM (ECM) in Plasmodium berghei ANKA (PbA)-infected C57BL/6 wildtype (WT) mice in an IL-10-independent manner. DOX-treated mice showed an intact blood-brain barrier (BBB) and attenuated brain inflammation. Importantly, if WT mice were infected with a 20-fold increased parasite load, they could be still protected from ECM if they received DOX from day 4-6 post infection, despite similar parasitemia compared to control-infected mice that did not receive DOX and developed ECM. Infiltration of T cells and cytotoxic responses were reduced in brains of DOX-treated mice. Analysis of brain tissue by RNA-array revealed reduced expression of chemokines and tumour necrosis factor (TNF) in brains of DOX-treated mice. Furthermore, DOX-administration resulted in brains of the mice in reduced expression of matrix metalloproteinase 2 (MMP2) and granzyme B, which are both factors associated with ECM pathology. Systemic interferon gamma production was reduced and activated peripheral T cells accumulated in the spleen in DOX-treated mice. Our results suggest that DOX targeted inflammatory processes in the central nervous system (CNS) and prevented ECM by impaired brain access of effector T cells in addition to its anti-parasitic effect, thereby expanding the understanding of molecular events that underlie DOX-mediated therapeutic interventions.


Sujet(s)
Antipaludiques/pharmacologie , Doxycycline/pharmacologie , Paludisme cérébral/prévention et contrôle , Animaux , Barrière hémato-encéphalique/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Barrière hémato-encéphalique/immunologie , Chimiokines/métabolisme , Modèles animaux de maladie humaine , Femelle , Inflammation/immunologie , Inflammation/prévention et contrôle , Médiateurs de l'inflammation/métabolisme , Interleukine-10/métabolisme , Activation des lymphocytes/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Paludisme cérébral/immunologie , Paludisme cérébral/parasitologie , Matrix metalloproteinase 2/métabolisme , Matrix metalloproteinase 9/métabolisme , Souris , Souris de lignée C57BL , Parasitémie/immunologie , Parasitémie/prévention et contrôle , Plasmodium berghei/immunologie , Plasmodium berghei/pathogénicité , Rate/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Rate/immunologie , Sous-populations de lymphocytes T/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Sous-populations de lymphocytes T/immunologie
9.
NPJ Vaccines ; 2: 29, 2017.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29263884

RÉSUMÉ

mRNA represents a promising new vaccine technology platform with high flexibility in regard to development and production. Here, we demonstrate that vaccines based on sequence optimized, chemically unmodified mRNA formulated in optimized lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) are highly immunogenic and well tolerated in non-human primates (NHPs). Single intramuscular vaccination of NHPs with LNP-formulated mRNAs encoding rabies or influenza antigens induced protective antibody titers, which could be boosted and remained stable during an observation period of up to 1 year. First mechanistic insights into the mode of action of the LNP-formulated mRNA vaccines demonstrated a strong activation of the innate immune response at the injection site and in the draining lymph nodes (dLNs). Activation of the innate immune system was reflected by a transient induction of pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines and activation of the majority of immune cells in the dLNs. Notably, our data demonstrate that mRNA vaccines can compete with licensed vaccines based on inactivated virus or are even superior in respect of functional antibody and T cell responses. Importantly, we show that the developed LNP-formulated mRNA vaccines can be used as a vaccination platform allowing multiple, sequential vaccinations against different pathogens. These results provide strong evidence that the mRNA technology is a valid approach for the development of effective prophylactic vaccines to prevent infectious diseases.

10.
PLoS One ; 12(3): e0174030, 2017.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28301585

RÉSUMÉ

Maternal overnutrition and obesity during pregnancy can have long-term effects on offspring physiology and behaviour. These developmental programming effects may be mediated by fetal exposure to glucocorticoids, which is regulated in part by placental 11ß-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11ß-HSD) type 1 and 2. We tested whether a maternal high-fat, high-sucrose diet would alter expression of placental 11ß-HSD1 and 2, thereby increasing fetal exposure to maternal glucocorticoids, with downstream effects on offspring physiology and behaviour. C57BL/6J mice were fed a high-fat, high-sucrose (HFHS) diet or a nutrient-matched low-fat, no-sucrose control diet prior to and during pregnancy and lactation. At day 17 of gestation, HFHS dams had ~20% lower circulating corticosterone levels than controls. Furthermore, there was a significant interaction between maternal diet and fetal sex for circulating corticosterone levels in the fetuses, whereby HFHS males tended to have higher corticosterone than control males, with no effect in female fetuses. However, placental 11ß-HSD1 or 11ß-HSD2 expression did not differ between diets or show an interaction between diet and sex. To assess potential long-term consequences of this sex-specific effect on fetal corticosterone, we studied locomotor activity and metabolic traits in adult offspring. Despite a sex-specific effect of maternal diet on fetal glucocorticoids, there was little evidence of sex-specific effects on offspring physiology or behaviour, although HFHS offspring of both sexes had higher circulating corticosterone at 9 weeks of age. Our results suggest the existence of as yet unknown mechanisms that mitigate the effects of altered glucocorticoid exposure early in development, making offspring resilient to the potentially negative effects of a HFHS maternal diet.


Sujet(s)
Alimentation riche en graisse , Saccharose alimentaire/administration et posologie , Foetus/métabolisme , Glucocorticoïdes/métabolisme , Activité motrice , Facteurs sexuels , Animaux , Femelle , Mâle , Souris , Souris de lignée C57BL , Grossesse
11.
J Biol Chem ; 291(37): 19517-31, 2016 09 09.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27474745

RÉSUMÉ

Cerebral malaria is a severe and often fatal complication of Plasmodium falciparum infection. It is characterized by parasite sequestration, a breakdown of the blood-brain barrier, and a strong inflammation in the brain. We investigated the role of the cannabinoid receptor 2 (CB2), an important modulator of neuroinflammatory responses, in experimental cerebral malaria (ECM). Strikingly, mice with a deletion of the CB2-encoding gene (Cnr2(-/-)) inoculated with Plasmodium berghei ANKA erythrocytes exhibited enhanced survival and a diminished blood-brain barrier disruption. Therapeutic application of a specific CB2 antagonist also conferred increased ECM resistance in wild type mice. Hematopoietic derived immune cells were responsible for the enhanced protection in bone marrow (BM) chimeric Cnr2(-/-) mice. Mixed BM chimeras further revealed that CB2-expressing cells contributed to ECM development. A heterogeneous CD11b(+) cell population, containing macrophages and neutrophils, expanded in the Cnr2(-/-) spleen after infection and expressed macrophage mannose receptors, arginase-1 activity, and IL-10. Also in the Cnr2(-/-) brain, CD11b(+) cells that expressed selected anti-inflammatory markers accumulated, and expression of inflammatory mediators IFN-γ and TNF-α was reduced. Finally, the M2 macrophage chemokine CCL17 was identified as an essential factor for enhanced survival in the absence of CB2, because CCL17 × Cnr2 double-deficient mice were fully susceptible to ECM. Thus, targeting CB2 may be promising for the development of alternative treatment regimes of ECM.


Sujet(s)
Barrière hémato-encéphalique/immunologie , Chimiokine CCL17/immunologie , Paludisme cérébral/immunologie , Plasmodium berghei/immunologie , Récepteur cannabinoïde de type CB2/immunologie , Animaux , Arginase/génétique , Arginase/immunologie , Barrière hémato-encéphalique/parasitologie , Barrière hémato-encéphalique/anatomopathologie , Chimiokine CCL17/génétique , Modèles animaux de maladie humaine , Prédisposition aux maladies , Femelle , Interleukine-10/génétique , Interleukine-10/immunologie , Lectines de type C/génétique , Lectines de type C/immunologie , Macrophages/immunologie , Macrophages/anatomopathologie , Paludisme cérébral/génétique , Paludisme cérébral/anatomopathologie , Mâle , Récepteur du mannose , Lectines liant le mannose/génétique , Lectines liant le mannose/immunologie , Souris , Souris knockout , Granulocytes neutrophiles/immunologie , Granulocytes neutrophiles/anatomopathologie , Récepteur cannabinoïde de type CB2/génétique , Récepteurs de surface cellulaire/génétique , Récepteurs de surface cellulaire/immunologie
12.
PLoS One ; 11(5): e0155629, 2016.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27182601

RÉSUMÉ

Despite tremendous progress in our understanding of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) natural history and advances in HIV treatment, there is neither an approved vaccine nor a cure for infection. Here, we describe the development and characterization of a novel replicating vaccine vector utilizing Cytomegalovirus (CMV) and a TLR5 adjuvant. After partial truncation of the central, immunodominant hypervariable domain, flagellin (fliC) from Salmonella was cloned downstream of a codon optimized gag gene from simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) and transiently expressed in telomerized rhesus fibroblast (TeloRF) cells in culture. Lysates generated from these transfected cells induced the tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), in a mouse macrophage cell line, in a TLR5-dependent manner. The Gag/FliC expression construct was cloned into a bacterial artificial chromosome encoding the rhesus CMV (RhCMV) genome, and infectious RhCMV was generated following transfection of TeloRF cells. This virus stably expressed an SIV Gag/FliC fusion protein through four serial passages. Lysates generated from infected cells induced TNF-α in a TLR5-dependent manner. Western blot analysis of infected cell lysates verified expression of a Gag/FliC fusion protein using a SIV p27 capsid monoclonal antibody. Lastly, rhesus macaques inoculated with this novel RhCMV virus demonstrated increased inflammatory responses at the site of inoculation seven days post-infection when compared to the parental RhCMV. These results demonstrate that an artificially constructed replicating RhCMV expressing an SIV Gag/FliC fusion protein is capable of activating TLR5 in a macrophage cell line in vitro and induction of an altered inflammatory response in vivo. Ongoing animals studies are aimed at determining vaccine efficacy, including subsequent challenge with pathogenic SIV.


Sujet(s)
Vaccins contre le SIDA/immunologie , Adjuvants immunologiques , Cytomegalovirus , Lentivirus/immunologie , Syndrome d'immunodéficience acquise du singe/immunologie , Syndrome d'immunodéficience acquise du singe/prévention et contrôle , Virus de l'immunodéficience simienne/immunologie , Récepteur de type Toll-5 , Animaux , Cytomegalovirus/génétique , Cytomegalovirus/immunologie , Femelle , Régulation de l'expression des gènes , Ordre des gènes , Produits du gène gag/génétique , Produits du gène gag/immunologie , Vecteurs génétiques/génétique , Vecteurs génétiques/immunologie , Macaca mulatta , Mutation , Motifs et domaines d'intéraction protéique , Protéines de fusion recombinantes/génétique , Protéines de fusion recombinantes/immunologie , Récepteur de type Toll-5/composition chimique , Récepteur de type Toll-5/génétique , Récepteur de type Toll-5/métabolisme , Facteur de nécrose tumorale alpha/génétique
13.
Dev Comp Immunol ; 54(1): 116-25, 2016 Jan.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26366679

RÉSUMÉ

Glucocorticoids are important for production of functional lymphocytes and immunity. In altricial neonates, adrenal glands are unresponsive and local glucocorticoid synthesis in lymphoid organs may be necessary to support lymphocyte development. Precocial neonates, in contrast, have fully responsive adrenal glucocorticoid production, and lymphoid glucocorticoid synthesis may not be necessary. Here, we found that in altricial zebra finch hatchlings, lymphoid organs had dramatically elevated endogenous glucocorticoid (and precursor) levels compared to levels in circulating blood. Furthermore, while avian adrenals produce corticosterone, finch lymphoid organs had much higher levels of cortisol, an unexpected glucocorticoid in birds. In contrast, precocial Japanese quail and chicken offspring did not have locally elevated lymphoid glucocorticoid levels, nor did their lymphoid organs contain high proportions of cortisol. These results show that lymphoid glucocorticoids differ in identity, concentration, and possibly source, in hatchlings of three different bird species. Locally-regulated glucocorticoids might have species-specific roles in immune development.


Sujet(s)
Poulets/immunologie , Coturnix/immunologie , Fringillidae/immunologie , Hydrocortisone/biosynthèse , Tissu lymphoïde/métabolisme , Animaux , Animaux nouveau-nés , Poulets/croissance et développement , Chromatographie en phase liquide à haute performance , Coturnix/croissance et développement , Fringillidae/croissance et développement , Hydrocortisone/analyse , Dosage immunologique , Tissu lymphoïde/immunologie , Spécificité d'espèce
14.
Physiol Biochem Zool ; 88(2): 183-94, 2015.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25730273

RÉSUMÉ

Multiple components of the immune system are modulated by environmental factors, including exposure to stressors. In particular, chronic stressors can impair development of the immune system, leading to alterations in immune function in adulthood. While these effects have been well established in mammals, less is known about how developmental stress modulates immunity in nonmammalian species. We determined the long-term effects of exposure to early-life stressors on immunity in song sparrows including the swelling response to phytohemagglutinin (PHA) and several measures of constitutive innate immunity. Song sparrows were reared in captivity from 3 d of age and exposed to control conditions, food restriction, or corticosterone (CORT) treatment. Males exposed to food restriction or CORT treatment had less swelling of the wing web in response to PHA than control males; however, neither treatment affected the swelling response to PHA in females. The treatments also had sex-specific effects on constitutive innate immune function. Specifically, CORT-treated males had lower antimicrobial capacity toward a strain of the bacterium E. coli but higher antimicrobial activity toward a strain of the fungus Candida albicans compared to food-restricted or control males. In contrast, neither treatment affected constitutive innate immunity in females. These results suggest that male and female song sparrows may differ in how they allocate resources to development of the immune system when reared in stressful or food-limited conditions.


Sujet(s)
Moineaux/immunologie , Animaux , Candida albicans , Corticostérone/pharmacologie , Escherichia coli , Femelle , Privation alimentaire , Immunité innée , Mâle , Phytohémagglutinine/immunologie , Facteurs sexuels , Moineaux/microbiologie , Stress physiologique
15.
J Emerg Nurs ; 41(2): 119-24, 2015 Mar.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25612513

RÉSUMÉ

PROBLEM: Although hand hygiene strategies significantly reduce health care-associated infections, multiple studies have documented that hand hygiene is the most overlooked and poorly performed infection control intervention. METHODS: Emergency nurses and technicians (n = 95) in a 41-bed emergency department in eastern Virginia completed pretests and posttests, an education module, and two experiential learning activities reinforcing hand hygiene and infection control protocols. RESULTS: Posttest scores were significantly higher than pretest scores (t (108) = -6.928, P = .048). Hand hygiene compliance rates improved at the conclusion of the project and 3 months after the study (F (2, 15) = 9.89, P = .002). IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Interfaces with staff as they completed the interactive exercise, as well as anecdotal notes collected during the study, identified key times when compliance suffered and offered opportunities to further improve hand hygiene and, ultimately, patient safety.


Sujet(s)
Infection croisée/prévention et contrôle , Service hospitalier d'urgences , Adhésion aux directives , Hygiène des mains/méthodes , Prévention des infections/méthodes , Humains , Virginie
16.
J Safety Res ; 49: 85-90, 2014 Jun.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24913491

RÉSUMÉ

INTRODUCTION: Positive safety effects of advanced driver assistance systems can only become effective if drivers accept and use these systems. Early detection of driver's intention would allow for selective system activation and therefore reduce false alarms. METHOD: This driving simulator study aims at exploring early predictors of lane changes. In total, 3111 lane changes of 51 participants on a simulated highway track were analyzed. RESULTS: Results show that drivers stopped their engagement in a secondary task about 7s before crossing the lane, which indicates a first planning phase of the maneuver. Subsequently, drivers start moving toward the lane, marking a mean steering wheel angle of 2.5°. Steering wheel angle as a directly measurable vehicle parameter appears as a promising early predictor of a lane change. A mathematical model of the steering wheel angle is presented, which is supposed to contribute for predicting lane change maneuvers. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS: The mathematical model will be part of a further predictor of lane changes. This predictor can be a new advanced driver assistance system able to recognize a driver's intention. With this knowledge, other systems can be activated or deactivated so drivers get no annoying and exhausting alarm signals. This is one way how we can increase the acceptance of assistance systems.


Sujet(s)
Accidents de la route/prévention et contrôle , Conduite automobile , Automobiles , Intention , Modèles biologiques , Mouvement , Sécurité , Adulte , Simulation numérique , Femelle , Humains , Mâle , Jeune adulte
17.
Integr Comp Biol ; 54(4): 568-77, 2014 Oct.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24951504

RÉSUMÉ

Sexual-selection theory posits that ornaments and displays can reflect a signaler's condition, which in turn is affected both by recent and developmental conditions. Moreover, developmental conditions can induce correlations between sexually selected and other traits if both types of traits exhibit developmental phenotypic plasticity in response to stressors. Thus, sexually selected traits may reflect recent and/or developmental characteristics of signalers. Here, we review data on the relationships between birdsong, a sexually selected trait, and developmental and current condition of birds from a long-term study of a population of song sparrows (Melospiza melodia). Field studies of free-living birds indicate that the complexity of a male's songs, a permanent trait, reflects the size of a song-control region of his brain (HVC), and is correlated with body size and several parameters of immunity, specifically investment in protective proteins. However, the performance of a male's songs, a dynamic trait, is not correlated to immune investment. Complexity of song is correlated with the glucocorticoid stress-response, and in some years response to stress predicts overwinter survival. Experimental manipulations have revealed that stressors in early life impair development of HVC, but that HVC recovers in size by adulthood. These manipulations result in impaired song-complexity and song-learning, but not song-performance. Experimental developmental stressors also affect growth, endocrine physiology, metabolism, and immune-function, often in a sex-specific manner. Combined, these studies suggest that song-complexity provides reliable information about early developmental experience, and about other traits that have critical developmental periods. Birdsong thus provides a multi-faceted sexually selected trait that may be an indicator both of developmental and recent conditions.


Sujet(s)
Moineaux/croissance et développement , Moineaux/physiologie , Stress physiologique/physiologie , Vocalisation animale/physiologie , Animaux , Mâle
18.
Gen Comp Endocrinol ; 196: 72-80, 2014 Jan 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24291303

RÉSUMÉ

Variation in early environmental conditions can have long-term effects on physiology and behavior, a process referred to as developmental programming. In particular, exposure to early-life stressors can have long-term effects on regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) and hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axes. Although these effects have been well documented in mammals, less is known about how early-life stress affects regulation of these endocrine systems in non-mammalian species. In the current study, we determined the long-term effects of early-life food restriction or corticosterone (CORT) treatment on the HPA axis of song sparrows (Melospiza melodia), including the responses to restraint stress, dexamethasone challenge, and ACTH challenge. In addition, we assessed long-term effects on the HPG axis by measuring sex steroid levels (testosterone in males and 17ß-estradiol in females) before and after a gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) challenge. Subjects treated with CORT during development had larger increases in CORT in response to ACTH challenge than food-restricted or control subjects. Neither treatment affected the responses of CORT to restraint or dexamethasone. CORT-treated males also had higher initial testosterone levels, but neither treatment affected testosterone levels post-GnRH. Lastly, although GnRH challenge failed to increase circulating estradiol levels in females, females exposed to food restriction or CORT treatment had lower estradiol levels than control females. These results show that exposure to stress can developmentally program the endocrine system of songbirds and illustrate the importance of considering developmental conditions when determining the factors responsible for inter-individual variation in endocrine regulation.


Sujet(s)
Corticostérone/pharmacologie , Privation alimentaire , Axe hypothalamohypophysaire/physiologie , Axe hypophyso-surrénalien/physiologie , Moineaux/physiologie , Stress physiologique , Stress psychologique , Androgènes/pharmacologie , Animaux , Anti-inflammatoires/pharmacologie , Dexaméthasone/pharmacologie , Oestradiol/sang , Femelle , Hormone de libération des gonadotrophines/pharmacologie , Axe hypothalamohypophysaire/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Mâle , Axe hypophyso-surrénalien/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Testostérone/pharmacologie
19.
Gen Comp Endocrinol ; 190: 188-93, 2013 Sep 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23770216

RÉSUMÉ

A growing body of theoretical and empirical work has addressed the relationship between hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) function and fitness. For example, the corticosterone (CORT)-fitness and CORT-condition hypotheses predict that baseline and/or stress-induced levels of glucocorticoids should relate to fitness, and recent empirical studies have reported relationships between HPA function and fitness-related sexually selected traits. Here we introduce a framework for evaluating whether such relationships reflect functional relationships or developmental correlations. We then address this framework using data from a free-living population of song sparrows (Melospiza melodia). In two independent studies we have found that song complexity (a sexually selected trait) is correlated with stress reactivity: males with more complex vocal repertoires show reduced CORT response to standardized restraint stress. This pattern likely results from the early life environment concurrently affecting development of both song and the HPA axis. Suppression of CORT by dexamethasone was also correlated to measures of body condition and immune function, and females paired to males with higher stress-induced levels of CORT initiated egg-laying later. Finally, stress reactivity predicted overwinter survival in one year, although not in another. Thus, the relationship between HPA axis function and fitness likely varies temporally and by context. Some fitness-related traits may be functionally related to HPA regulation, but many others may be related through developmental correlation.


Sujet(s)
Axe hypothalamohypophysaire/métabolisme , Axe hypophyso-surrénalien/métabolisme , Moineaux/métabolisme , Animaux , Corticostérone/métabolisme , Femelle , Glucocorticoïdes/métabolisme , Mâle
20.
J Exp Biol ; 215(Pt 18): 3207-17, 2012 Sep 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22693025

RÉSUMÉ

Variation in the prenatal and postnatal environments can have long-term effects on adult phenotype. In humans and other animals, exposure to stressors can lead to long-term changes in physiology. These changes may predispose individuals to disease, especially disorders involving energy metabolism. In addition, by permanently altering metabolic rates and energy requirements, such effects could have important fitness consequences. We determined the effects of early-life food restriction and corticosterone (CORT) treatment on growth and adult body size, body composition (assessed via quantitative magnetic resonance) and metabolic rates in the song sparrow, Melospiza melodia. Nestlings were hand-raised in captivity from 3 days of age. Treatments (ad libitum food, food restriction or CORT treatment) lasted from day 7 to day 60. Both experimental treatments had sex-specific effects on growth. In the nestling period, CORT-treated males weighed more than controls, whereas CORT-treated females weighed less than controls. Food-restricted males weighed the same as controls, whereas food-restricted females weighed less than controls. Both experimental treatments also had sex-specific effects on standard metabolic rate (SMR). Females exposed to food restriction or CORT treatment during development had higher SMRs in adulthood than control females, but neither stressor affected SMR in males. There were no effects of either treatment on adult body size, body composition (lean or fat mass) or peak metabolic rate. Therefore, early-life stress may have sex-specific programming effects on metabolic rates and energy expenditure in song sparrows. In addition, both treatments affected nestling growth in a manner that exaggerated the typical sex difference in nestling mass, which could provide male nestlings with a competitive advantage over their sisters when developing in a poor-quality environment.


Sujet(s)
Métabolisme basal/physiologie , Composition corporelle , Mensurations corporelles , Privation alimentaire/physiologie , Caractères sexuels , Moineaux/anatomie et histologie , Moineaux/croissance et développement , Stress physiologique , Vieillissement/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Vieillissement/physiologie , Animaux , Métabolisme basal/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Composition corporelle/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Mensurations corporelles/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Poids , Cortisone/sang , Cortisone/pharmacologie , Comportement alimentaire/physiologie , Femelle , Modèles linéaires , Mâle , Comportement de nidification/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Comportement de nidification/physiologie , Analyse en composantes principales , Moineaux/sang , Moineaux/métabolisme , Stress physiologique/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Vocalisation animale
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