Dopamine in Immunoregulation

Q4 Immunology and Microbiology
I. Bérczi, T. Katafuchi
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

In this issue Toth et al. [1] discusses the role of peripheral and brain derived dopamine (DA) in immune regulation. Here we consider briefly the possible way by which hormones and other central regulatory factors act peripherally in vivo. During the early years of the nineteenth centaury Endocrinologists recognized first when searching for the origin of hormones, that “everything is made everywhere”. This rule was true for all hormones and neurotransmitters that have been examined. This phenomenon has been re-discovered since that time over and over again. DA exerts an inhibitory effect on prolactin (PRL) and growth hormone (GH) secretion. This effect is very powerful. In rats treatment with bromocriptine (a DA agonist drug), inhibited completely the adaptive immune function (ADIM) [2]. The rule in the Neuroimmune Supersystem [3] is that mediators are shared: so classical hormones and neuropeptides are made in the immune system and everywhere else, lymphokines were discovered in the immune system first, but then were found in many other tissues and cells so their name was changed to cytokines, which implies tissue hormones. Sharing makes communication instantaneously possible [3]. Dopamine is no exception to this rule. It is made in the central nervous system (CNS) but also in various cell types in the immune system, and in many other tissue and organs in the body. In short, dopamine is made everywhere and acts everywhere [1]. One may argue that dopamine is a powerful immunoregulator, it can act centrally by inhibiting PRL secretion, and also acts peripherally by paracrine/autocrine (P/A) regulation. Yes indeed, this is very important from the point of usefulness. But how the central and peripheral mechanisms work under homeostatic conditions? There are myriads of mediators produced centrally, peripherally, and receptors are expressed and may be activated everywhere. This may lead to a very chaotic situation, signals are delivered everywhere; cells could go crazy under such bombarding. It was proposed that membrane bound receptors will cap on one pole of the cell surface after activation by specific ligands. Such receptors are phosphorylated by protein kinases and de-phoshorylated by phosphatases, which happens competitively at the same time. If phosphorylation is stronger the cell will be activated, if de-phosphorylation is stronger, the cells will be inhibited [4]. But there are many other mediators that do not use this signal transmission pathway. Alternate mechanisms are used by some membrane receptors. Also, there are cytoplasmic and nuclear receptors, which definitely would not be controlled by this kind of regulation [5]. It is important that every regulatory circuit has positive and negative signals and the signals will balance out physiologically, possibly under CNS control. The fact is that in spite of the countless mediators, receptors and signaling, the organism remains normal, all functions are in harmony and in homeostasis. The classical answer is that the CNS controls everything, so the peripheral mechanisms are kept under control by the CNS. Indeed we observed that PRL production by lymphocytes was regulated by the pituitary gland [6]. This would suggest that the CNS might exert a regulatory influence on all regulatory circuits under normal, homeostatic conditions. Could DA of CNS origin signal the immune system or other systems, tissues directly? The answer is yes. Dopaminergic nerves deliver DA to the tissues for local use. Apparently the CNS is in control here again. So it seems that during homeostasis, the local consumption of DA may be CNS regulated [1]. During homeostasis, cytokines are at minimal or undetectable level in the serum. During acute febrile illness cytokines of innate immunity (INIM) origin [e.g. interleukin – (IL1)-beta, IL-6, and tumor
多巴胺在免疫调节中的作用
在这一期Toth等人讨论了外周和脑源性多巴胺(DA)在免疫调节中的作用。在这里,我们简要地考虑激素和其他中枢调节因子在体内外周作用的可能方式。在19世纪早期,内分泌学家在寻找激素的起源时首先认识到,“一切都是在任何地方制造的”。这条规则适用于所有被检测的激素和神经递质。从那时起,这种现象一次又一次地被重新发现。DA对泌乳素(PRL)和生长激素(GH)的分泌有抑制作用。这种效果非常强大。溴隐亭(一种DA激动剂)对大鼠的适应性免疫功能(ADIM)[2]有完全抑制作用。神经免疫超级系统[3]的规则是介质是共享的:所以经典的激素和神经肽是在免疫系统和其他地方产生的,淋巴因子首先在免疫系统中被发现,但后来在许多其他组织和细胞中被发现所以它们的名字被改为细胞因子,这意味着组织激素。分享使交流瞬间成为可能。多巴胺也不例外。它在中枢神经系统(CNS)中产生,也在免疫系统的各种细胞类型中产生,以及在身体的许多其他组织和器官中产生。简而言之,多巴胺无处不在,无处不在。有人可能会认为多巴胺是一种强大的免疫调节剂,它可以通过抑制PRL的分泌来发挥中枢作用,也可以通过旁分泌/自分泌(P/ a)调节来发挥外周作用。的确,从有用性的角度来看,这是非常重要的。但是在稳态条件下中枢和外周机制是如何工作的呢?有无数的介质在中枢和外周产生,受体在任何地方表达并可能被激活。这可能会导致非常混乱的情况,信号到处传递;细胞在这样的轰炸下可能会发疯。有人提出膜结合受体在被特定配体激活后会在细胞表面的一极上盖住。这些受体被蛋白激酶磷酸化,并被磷酸酶去磷酸化,这两个过程同时竞争性地发生。如果磷酸化更强,细胞将被激活,如果去磷酸化更强,细胞将被抑制。但还有许多其他介质不使用这种信号传输途径。一些膜受体使用替代机制。此外,还有细胞质和核受体,它们肯定不会受到这种调节[5]的控制。重要的是,每个调节回路都有积极和消极的信号,这些信号将在生理上平衡,可能在中枢神经系统的控制下。事实是,尽管有无数的介质、受体和信号传导,生物体仍保持正常,所有功能都处于和谐和稳态。经典的答案是中枢神经系统控制着一切,所以外围机制是由中枢神经系统控制的。事实上,我们观察到淋巴细胞产生PRL受脑垂体[6]的调节。这表明中枢神经系统可能在正常、稳态条件下对所有调节回路施加调节影响。源自中枢神经系统的DA能否直接向免疫系统或其他系统、组织发出信号?答案是肯定的。多巴胺能神经将DA输送到组织供局部使用。很明显中枢神经系统又控制住了。因此,在稳态过程中,局部DA的消耗可能是由中枢神经系统调控的。在体内平衡期间,细胞因子在血清中处于最低或检测不到的水平。在急性发热性疾病中,先天免疫(INIM)来源的细胞因子[如白细胞介素- (il - 1)- β, IL-6和肿瘤]
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来源期刊
Advances in Neuroimmune Biology
Advances in Neuroimmune Biology Immunology and Microbiology-Immunology
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