Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0848237 (acute stress)
4,619 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have demonstrated that acute stress induces a large-magnitude, rapid, and reversible redistribution of leukocytes from the blood to other compartments within the body. These changes in leukocyte distribution are mediated by adrenal stress hormones. Because the skin is one of the target organs of a stress-induced redistribution of leukocyes, we hypothesized that such a leukocyte redistribution could be one of the factors by which acute stress may enhance cutaneous immune function. This hypothesis was tested by examining the effects of acute stress on cutaneous delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH). DTH reactions are antigen-specific, cell-mediated immune responses that, depending on the antigen involved, mediate beneficial (resistance to viruses, bacteria, and fungi) or harmful (allergic dermatitis, autoimmunity) aspects of immune function. DTH was induced by challenging the pinnae of previously sensitized rats with 2,4-dinitro-1-fluorobenzene (DNFB). Experiments showed that acute stress administered immediately before the introduction of an antigenic challenge significantly enhances a cutaneous DTH response. In contrast, chronic stress suppresses cutaneous DTH. These results demonstrate a bidirectional relationship between stress and immune function, such that acute stress enhances, while chronic stress suppresses, an important class of immune responses in vivo. They also suggest that stress-induced alterations in lymphocyte redeployment within the body may play an important role in mediating these bidirectional effects of stress on cell-mediated immunity.
...
PMID:Stress-induced enhancement of cell-mediated immunity. 962 63

Contrary to the widespread belief that stress is necessarily immunosuppressive, recent studies have shown that, under certain conditions, stress can induce a significant enhancement of a skin cell-mediated immune response [delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) or contact hypersensitivity]. Adrenal stress hormones and a stress-induced trafficking of leukocytes from the blood to the skin have been identified as systemic mediators of this immunoenhancement. Because gamma interferon (IFNgamma) is an important cytokine mediator of DTH, the studies described here were designed to examine its role as a local mediator of the stress-induced enhancement of skin DTH. The effect of acute stress on skin DTH was examined in wild-type and IFNgamma receptor-deficient (IFNgammaR-/-) mice that had previously been sensitized with 2,4-dinitro-1-fluorobenzene. Acutely stressed wild-type mice showed a significantly larger DTH response than nonstressed mice. In contrast, IFNgammaR-/- mice failed to show a stress-induced enhancement of skin DTH. Immunoneutralization of IFNgamma in wild-type mice significantly reduced the stress-induced enhancement of skin DTH. In addition, an inflammatory response induced by direct IFNgamma administration to the skin was significantly enhanced by acute stress. Our results suggest that IFNgamma is an important local mediator of a stress-induced enhancement of skin DTH. These studies are clinically relevant because, depending on the nature of the antigen, DTH reactions mediate numerous protective (e.g., resistance to viral, bacterial, parasitic, and fungal infections) or pathological (e.g., autoimmune reactions and contact sensitivity reactions such as that to poison ivy) immune responses.
...
PMID:Stress-induced enhancement of skin immune function: A role for gamma interferon. 1070 26