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Invited review

The role of chemical‐induced stress responses in immunosuppression: A review of quantitative associations and cause‐effect relationships between chemical‐induced stress responses and immunosuppression

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Pages 163-192 | Received 19 Oct 1992, Accepted 21 Dec 1992, Published online: 14 Jul 2010
 

Abstract

Although there is an increasing awareness that drugs and chemicals can modulate the immune system by indirect mechanisms, few compounds have been thoroughly evaluated in this regard. Several environmentally relevant chemicals induce stresslike responses, as indicated by elevated glucocorticoid levels. Comparable glucocorticoid levels induced by physical or psychological stressors are consistently associated with suppression of one or more immunological parameters. Thus, it seems likely that stress‐related neuroendocrine mechanisms are important in immunosuppression by some environmental chemicals. Distinguishing direct and indirect (stress‐related) mechanisms of immunosuppression is generally possible, and this could be done as a routine part of immunotoxicity assessment. Although it is clear that glucocorticoids can contribute to such immunosuppression, it is also clear that several other neuroendocrine mediators associated with stress responses can be immunomodulatory. Thus, correlation between glucocorticoid levels and immunosuppression does not conclusively demonstrate a cause‐effect relationship. Demonstrating such relationships has been difficult, but it has been done in a few cases of drug‐induced thymic hypoplasia by monitoring several parameters known to be affected by glucocorticoids and by measuring the ability of a glucocorticoid antagonist (RU 486) or adrenalectomy to block changes in these parameters. A similar strategy might be useful for evaluation of the role of glucocorticoids in drug‐ or chemical‐induced suppression of a variety of immune functions, but the effects of RU 486 on neuroendocrine feedback circuits and the possibility of consequent immunological changes must be considered when the data are interpreted. This approach could also be applied to evaluation of the roles in chemical‐induced immunosuppression of other neuroendocrine mediators for which antagonists or agents that block the synthesis or release of the mediator are available. However, it is likely that a comprehensive (and perhaps predictive) understanding of the relationship between chemically induced stress responses and immunosuppression will require more detailed and quantitative elucidation of the mechanisms and regulation of neuroendocrine‐immune interactions.

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