Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P43026 (lipopolysaccharide)
62,215 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Various medical conditions that involve activation of the immune system are associated with psychological and neuroendocrine changes that resemble the characteristics of depression. In this review we present our recent studies, designed to investigate the relationship between the behavioral effects of immune activation and depressive symptomatology. In the first set of experiments, we used a double-blind prospective design to investigate the psychological consequences of illness in two models: (1) vaccination of teenage girls with live attenuated rubella virus, and (2) lipopolysaccharide (LPS) administration in healthy male volunteers. In the rubella study, we demonstrated that, compared to control group subjects and to their own baseline, a subgroup of vulnerable individuals (girls from low socioeconomic status) showed a significant virus-induced increase in depressed mood up to 10 weeks after vaccination. In an ongoing study on the effects of LPS, we demonstrated significant LPS-induced elevation in the levels of depression and anxiety as well as memory deficits. These psychological effects were highly correlated with the levels of LPS-induced cytokine secretion. In parallel experiments, we demonstrated in rodents that immune activation with various acute and chronic immune challenges induces a depressive-like syndrome, characterized by anhedonia, anorexia, body weight loss, and reduced locomotor, exploratory, and social behavior. Chronic treatment with antidepressants (imipramine or fluoxetine) attenuated many of the behavioral effects of LPS, as well as LPS-induced changes in body temperature, adrenocortical activation, hypothalamic serotonin release, and the expression of splenic TNF-alpha mRNA. Taken together, these findings suggest that cytokines are involved in the etiology and symptomatology of illness-associated depression.
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PMID:Illness, cytokines, and depression. 1126 75

Antidepressants produce various immunomodulatory effects, as well as an attenuation of the behavioral responses to immune challenges, such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS). To explore further the effects of antidepressants on neuroimmune interactions, rats were treated daily with either fluoxetine (Prozac) or saline for 5 weeks, and various behavioral, neuroendocrine, and immune functions were measured following administration of either LPS or saline. Chronic fluoxetine treatment significantly attenuated the anorexia and body weight loss, as well as the depletion of CRH-41 from the median eminence and the elevation in serum corticosterone levels induced by LPS. Chronic treatment with imipramine also attenuated LPS-induced adrenocortical activation. In rats and in mice, which normally display a biphasic body temperature response to LPS (initial hypothermia followed by hyperthermia), chronic treatment with fluoxetine completely abolished the hypothermic response and facilitated and strengthened the hyperthermic response. The effects of antidepressants on the responsiveness to LPS are probably not mediated by their effects on peripheral proinflammatory cytokine production, because LPS-induced expression of TNFalpha and IL-1beta mRNA in the spleen (assessed by semiquantitative in situ hybridization) was not altered following chronic treatment with either fluoxetine or imipramine. The effects of antidepressants on the acute phase response may have important clinical implications for the psychiatric and neuroendocrine disturbances that are commonly associated with various medical conditions.
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PMID:Effects of antidepressant drugs on the behavioral and physiological responses to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in rodents. 1128 53

Sialodacryoadenitis (SDA) is a highly contagious common viral infection in rats, akin to mumps in humans. Anorexia occurs during such viral infection. But the pattern of the decrease in food intake (a decrease in either meal size and meal number or both) during spontaneous viral infection has not been previously characterized. We observed the onset of anorexia and an abnormal feeding pattern during an opportunistic SDA viral infection in our rat colony. We thus studied seven male rats. Before the viral infection there was a positive association between food intake and meal number (P<.05). After infection food intake decreased by 68%. This occurred via a significant decrease in meal size (by 69%) (P<.05); and a nonsignificant decrease in meal number (P=.71). This pattern of decreased food intake is similar to that occurring during indomethacin-induced ulcerative ileitis, where we previously measured an increase in plasma tumor-necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha. Anorexia in response to bacterial lipopolysaccharide administration, which is also linked to plasma TNF-alpha, is however, caused only via a decrease in meal number. The differences in the decrease in the feeding pattern between the SDA viral and a bacterial infection suggest that factors other than TNF-alpha alone play a significant role in the mechanism of anorexia during a viral infection.
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PMID:Feeding behavior during sialodacryoadenitis viral infection in rats. 1133 4

The purpose of this study was to examine whether nociceptin/orphanin FQ (NC), the endogenous ligand of the opioid receptor-like 1 (ORL1) receptor, is able to block hypophagia induced by either stress or central administration of corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) in rats. A marked reduction in food consumption was observed following exposure to 15 min intermittent electric footshock, 60 min physical immobilization or after intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injection of CRF (0.1-1.0 microgram/rat). i.c.v. pretreatment with NC (0.1-2.0 micrograms/rat) completely abolished the hypophagic effect induced by stress or by i.c.v. CRF injection. The same i.c.v. doses of NC did not modify food consumption in food deprived rats and did not modify the anorexic effect induced by lipopolysaccharide, suggesting that the effect of NC is selective for anorexia induced by stress or CRF. These findings provide original evidence that NC attenuates stress-induced anorexia, presumably by acting as a functional CRF antagonist.
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PMID:Nociceptin/orphanin FQ inhibits stress- and CRF-induced anorexia in rats. 1133 81

Sexually differentiated responses occur in molecular, cellular, physiologic, and organismic aspects of immune-system function in relation to acquired and innate immunities. These sex differences apparently include activational effects, which depend on gonadal hormone levels in adults, and lifelong effects, which arise directly from genetic differences or organizational effects of gonadal hormones early in development that lead to lifelong sex differences. Sex differences in immune function also can have great biological significance. Despite this, the mechanisms of these effects rarely have been analyzed extensively. This is especially true of anorexia during illness or disease. Therefore, this review briefly considers 1) the biological mechanisms of sex differences; 2) sex differences in immune function; 3) clinical and experimental data related to sex differences in four diseases or disease models that involve anorexia, Crohn's inflammatory-bowel disease, cancer, turpentine inflammation, and lipopolysaccharide bacteremia; and 4) sex differences in anorexia after interleukin-1 administration.
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PMID:Sex differences in disease anorexia. 1139 14

Anorexia and weight loss are manifestations of inflammation seen both in patients and in experimental animal models such as the lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-treated rat. Using in situ hybridization, the levels of mRNAs encoding proopiomelanocortin (POMC), neuropeptide Y (NPY), galanin, melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) and cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART) were investigated in the rat hypothalamus after a single intraperitoneal dose (125 microg/kg) of LPS. Four hours after LPS injection the food intake was significantly decreased. POMC and CART mRNA levels were increased in the arcuate nucleus, and MCH, CART and galanin mRNAs were all decreased in the lateral hypothalamic area in LPS-treated rats. Levels of mRNAs for NPY and galanin in the arcuate nucleus, and for MCH and CART in the zona incerta did not change significantly after LPS treatment. These findings support the hypothesis that LPS-induced factors mediate signalling to the POMC/CART neurons in the arcuate nucleus which could lead to reduced food intake by decreasing MCH, CART and galanin synthesis in target lateral hypothalamic neurons.
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PMID:Effect of LPS administration on the expression of POMC, NPY, galanin, CART and MCH mRNAs in the rat hypothalamus. 1140 87

Injections of lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 3 microg) into the lateral ventricle elicited anorexia with fever and also decreased body weight in rats. The LPS-induced anorexia was inhibited by intracerebroventicular (i.c.v.) injections of anti-interleukin (IL)-1beta antibody (Ab), chelerythrine, genistein and tyrphostin 46, but not by injections of indomethacin. Consecutive injections of orthovanadate and LPS (0.3 microg, a dose of LPS that did not show any effect on food intake, body weight or body temperature) reduced body weight, but did not induce anorexia. On the other hand, injections of IL-1beta (50 ng) did not influence food intake, although they decreased body weight and produced fever. The IL-1beta-induced decrease in body weight was inhibited by injections of genistein, but not by injections of chelerythrine or indomethacin. These findings suggest that the LPS-induced anorexia is independent of hyperthermia and involves IL-1beta generation, tyrosine kinase (TK) and protein kinase C (PKC). This is the first in vivo evidence that activation of TK and PKC induced by LPS is linked to anorexia.
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PMID:Involvement of protein kinase C and tyrosine kinase in lipopolysaccharide-induced anorexia. 1142 64

Anorexia is one of the most common symptoms associated with illness and constitutes an adaptive strategy in fighting acute infectious diseases. However, prolonged reduction in food intake and an increase in metabolic rate, as seen in the anorexia-cachexia syndrome, lead to depletion of body fat and protein reserves, thus worsening the organism's condition. Because the central nervous system controls many aspects of food intake, soluble factors known as cytokines that are secreted by immune cells might act on the brain to induce anorexia during disease. This review focuses on the communication pathways from the immune system to the brain that might mediate anorexia during disease. The vagus nerve is a rapid route of communication from the immune system to the brain, as subdiaphragmatic vagotomy attenuates the decrease in food-motivated behavior and c-Fos expression in the central nervous system in response to peripheral administration of the proinflammatory cytokine, interleukin-1beta, or bacterial lipopolysaccharide. At later time points after peripheral lipopolysaccharide administration, interleukin-1 itself acts in the brain to mediate anorexia and is found in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus. The mechanisms by which interleukin-1beta gains access to the brain and the potential role of neuropeptide-Y-containing neurons in the arcuate hypothalamus in mediating anorexia during disease are discussed.
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PMID:How the immune and nervous systems interact during disease-associated anorexia. 1144 93

Using dual-labeling in situ hybridization histochemistry, the neurotransmitter expression of immune-responsive neurons in the pontine parabrachial nucleus, a major relay for interoceptive information, was investigated. Intravenous injection of bacterial wall lipopolysaccharide resulted in dense c-fos mRNA expression in the external lateral parabrachial nucleus, and a majority of the c-fos expressing cells also expressed calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) mRNA. In contrast CGRP-positive cells in the adjoining external medial subnucleus were c-fos negative. Taken together with previous hodological and behavioral studies, these data suggest that CGRPergic parabrachial neurons may mediate lipopolysaccharide-induced anorexia by means of their projection to central nucleus of the amygdala.
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PMID:Feeding-related immune responsive brain stem neurons: association with CGRP. 1149 18

To determine the role of leptin in endotoxin-induced anorexia in ruminants, circulating leptin levels were measured during acute experimental endotoxemia in sheep. Injection of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (450 ng/kg, i.v.) induced anorexia accompanied with fever and increases in serum levels of cortisol, insulin and glucose which are known to stimulate leptin secretion in rodent and human, while it did not affect serum leptin levels at all. These results indicate that serum leptin levels in sheep during acute endotoxemia are differentially regulated from those in rodent and human, and that leptin might not be involved in the endotoxin-induced anorexia in sheep.
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PMID:No alteration in serum leptin levels during acute endotoxemia in sheep. 1171 34


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