TY - JOUR
T1 - Low levels of circulating inflammatory cytokines - Do they affect human brain functions?
AU - Pollmächer, Thomas
AU - Haack, Monika
AU - Schuld, Andreas
AU - Reichenberg, Abraham
AU - Yirmiya, Raz
N1 - Funding Information:
Thomas Pollmächer and Raz Yirmiya have been supported by a grant from the German–Israeli Foundation.
PY - 2002
Y1 - 2002
N2 - Animal studies provide consistent evidence for the pivotal role of inflammatory cytokines in inducing sickness behavior during systemic infection and inflammation. Because depression in humans shows a considerable symptomatic overlap with sickness behavior, it has been hypothesized that cytokines are also involved in affective disorders. This view is supported by studies showing that therapeutic administration of inflammatory cytokines can induce typical major depression and by evidence that stimulated cytokine-release during experimental endotoxemia provokes transient deterioration in mood and memory. However, in these conditions, similar to the animal models of acute infections, huge amounts of cytokines produced in the periphery act on the brain. In contrast, during most clinical conditions where depression might involve cytokine actions, such as chronic infection and inflammation, only low amounts of cytokines are circulating. The present paper addresses the question whether and how low amounts of circulating cytokines act on the human brain. Evidence is presented that very low amounts of circulating cytokines are likely to influence brain functions, even under baseline conditions. It is also likely that low levels of cytokines affect the same brain function as high levels do. However, it is uncertain whether these effects go in the same direction. NonREM sleep, for example, is promoted by a slight increase in cytokine levels, but suppressed by prominent increases. Because no comparable data are available for mood and other brain functions, the answer to the question whether and how low circulating amounts of cytokines affect mood depends on further experimental studies.
AB - Animal studies provide consistent evidence for the pivotal role of inflammatory cytokines in inducing sickness behavior during systemic infection and inflammation. Because depression in humans shows a considerable symptomatic overlap with sickness behavior, it has been hypothesized that cytokines are also involved in affective disorders. This view is supported by studies showing that therapeutic administration of inflammatory cytokines can induce typical major depression and by evidence that stimulated cytokine-release during experimental endotoxemia provokes transient deterioration in mood and memory. However, in these conditions, similar to the animal models of acute infections, huge amounts of cytokines produced in the periphery act on the brain. In contrast, during most clinical conditions where depression might involve cytokine actions, such as chronic infection and inflammation, only low amounts of cytokines are circulating. The present paper addresses the question whether and how low amounts of circulating cytokines act on the human brain. Evidence is presented that very low amounts of circulating cytokines are likely to influence brain functions, even under baseline conditions. It is also likely that low levels of cytokines affect the same brain function as high levels do. However, it is uncertain whether these effects go in the same direction. NonREM sleep, for example, is promoted by a slight increase in cytokine levels, but suppressed by prominent increases. Because no comparable data are available for mood and other brain functions, the answer to the question whether and how low circulating amounts of cytokines affect mood depends on further experimental studies.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0036429451&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/S0889-1591(02)00004-1
DO - 10.1016/S0889-1591(02)00004-1
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C2 - 12401466
AN - SCOPUS:0036429451
SN - 0889-1591
VL - 16
SP - 525
EP - 532
JO - Brain, Behavior, and Immunity
JF - Brain, Behavior, and Immunity
IS - 5
ER -