Acute stress-induced immune alterations can result in adapted function with prolonged exposure to the same stressor. The present study was designed to evaluate the possible role of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axis on the adaptation of spleen lymphocyte responsiveness to repeated stress. For this purpose, we selected a stressful protocol (aversive auditory stimulation) that induced an initial suppression (1 day), followed by a return to control values with repeated application (4 days), of mitogen-induced lymphocyte proliferation. Because rats exposed to 4 days of noise sessions show enhanced adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) and corticosterone levels, we tested the possibility that adaptation of lymphoproliferation by repeated stress was due to a desensitization of splenic lymphocytes to stress-released HPA hormones. The results showed that corticotropin-releasing factor (10(-9) M) and corticosterone (5 x 10(-8) and 10(-7) M), as well as dexamethasone (10(-8), 5 x 10(-8), and 10(-7) M), significantly suppressed lymphoproliferation from both control and stressed rats in a similar way. ACTH (10(-9) and 5 x 10(-9) M) did not significantly influence Concanavalin-A-stimulated spleen lymphocytes. These data indicate that adaptation of lymphocyte proliferation by repeated noise stress occurs without accompanying alterations in lymphocyte responsiveness to HPA hormones.
Maria del Carmen Sandi Perez, Olivia Zanoletti, Maude Schneider, Farnaz Delavari