Different photoperiods affect proliferation of lymphocytes but not expression of cellular, humoral, or innate immunity in hamsters
Different photoperiods affect proliferation of lymphocytes but not expression of cellular, humoral, or innate immunity in hamsters
In seasonal mammals, photoperiod change is associated with a suite of alterations in physiology. It has recently been proposed that the immune response is one of the systems regulated by changes in photoperiod, although this hypothesis has not been rigorously challenged by assays of functional immune responses. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that photoperiod modulates immune responsiveness in Syrian (Mesocricetus auratus) and Siberian (Phodopus sungorus) hamsters. Consistent with previously reported data, short-day-housed (SD) animals exhibited a significant increase in lymphnode cell (LNC) numbers and increased cellular proliferation in response to the polyclonal mitogen concanavalin A compared to long-day-housed (LD) animals. In contrast, LNC numbers from intact or gonadectomized SD animals that had been sensitized with the antigen dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB) exhibited a reduced ex vivo proliferative response and reduced production of interleukin-6(IL-6) compared to LD animals. In vivo studies of the contact hypersensitivity response of animals that had previously been sensitized, and subsequently challenged, with DNFB were similar in SD and LD animals, as was the proliferative activity of LNC recovered from these animals. There were also no photoperiodic differences in the antidinitrophenyl antibody response of animals sensitized with DNFB, or the anti-sheep red blood cell (srbc) response of animals immunized with srbc. Furthermore, no differences could be detected in the activity of natural killer cells from spleens of LD and SD Siberian hamsters, or in lipopolysaccharide-induced IL-6 production by LD and SD Syrian hamsters invivo. Thus, although photoperiod is able to influence factors regulating the gross number and non-antigen-specific proliferation of lymphocytes in seasonally breeding mammals, day length does not directly influence activation of an effective immune response. The authors conclude, therefore, that expression of the immune response is not directly modified or compromised by photoperiod in these seasonally breeding hamster species.
seasonal, immunity, antibody, cell-mediated immunity, cytotoxicity, inflammation, cytokines
392-405
Zhou, Shaoyuan
a8168c67-66f3-4597-be06-3918ebd7bba4
Cagampang, Felino R.A.
7cf57d52-4a65-4554-8306-ed65226bc50e
Stirland, J. Anne
96e3fb71-37ae-4fe4-bb12-9a7d80a51be5
Loudon, Andrew S.I.
8a8068a4-ed1d-49ec-b2ae-4170e00c039a
Hopkins, Stephen J.
996e825e-85fe-434c-a4df-2b2ed6437d90
2002
Zhou, Shaoyuan
a8168c67-66f3-4597-be06-3918ebd7bba4
Cagampang, Felino R.A.
7cf57d52-4a65-4554-8306-ed65226bc50e
Stirland, J. Anne
96e3fb71-37ae-4fe4-bb12-9a7d80a51be5
Loudon, Andrew S.I.
8a8068a4-ed1d-49ec-b2ae-4170e00c039a
Hopkins, Stephen J.
996e825e-85fe-434c-a4df-2b2ed6437d90
Zhou, Shaoyuan, Cagampang, Felino R.A., Stirland, J. Anne, Loudon, Andrew S.I. and Hopkins, Stephen J.
(2002)
Different photoperiods affect proliferation of lymphocytes but not expression of cellular, humoral, or innate immunity in hamsters.
Journal of Biological Rhythms, 17 (5), .
(doi:10.1177/074873002129002690).
Abstract
In seasonal mammals, photoperiod change is associated with a suite of alterations in physiology. It has recently been proposed that the immune response is one of the systems regulated by changes in photoperiod, although this hypothesis has not been rigorously challenged by assays of functional immune responses. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that photoperiod modulates immune responsiveness in Syrian (Mesocricetus auratus) and Siberian (Phodopus sungorus) hamsters. Consistent with previously reported data, short-day-housed (SD) animals exhibited a significant increase in lymphnode cell (LNC) numbers and increased cellular proliferation in response to the polyclonal mitogen concanavalin A compared to long-day-housed (LD) animals. In contrast, LNC numbers from intact or gonadectomized SD animals that had been sensitized with the antigen dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB) exhibited a reduced ex vivo proliferative response and reduced production of interleukin-6(IL-6) compared to LD animals. In vivo studies of the contact hypersensitivity response of animals that had previously been sensitized, and subsequently challenged, with DNFB were similar in SD and LD animals, as was the proliferative activity of LNC recovered from these animals. There were also no photoperiodic differences in the antidinitrophenyl antibody response of animals sensitized with DNFB, or the anti-sheep red blood cell (srbc) response of animals immunized with srbc. Furthermore, no differences could be detected in the activity of natural killer cells from spleens of LD and SD Siberian hamsters, or in lipopolysaccharide-induced IL-6 production by LD and SD Syrian hamsters invivo. Thus, although photoperiod is able to influence factors regulating the gross number and non-antigen-specific proliferation of lymphocytes in seasonally breeding mammals, day length does not directly influence activation of an effective immune response. The authors conclude, therefore, that expression of the immune response is not directly modified or compromised by photoperiod in these seasonally breeding hamster species.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: 2002
Keywords:
seasonal, immunity, antibody, cell-mediated immunity, cytotoxicity, inflammation, cytokines
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 26161
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/26161
ISSN: 0748-7304
PURE UUID: 6a54d4ca-899a-482d-8326-58ca61b24d22
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 19 Apr 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:29
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Shaoyuan Zhou
Author:
J. Anne Stirland
Author:
Andrew S.I. Loudon
Author:
Stephen J. Hopkins
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics