|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Time-dependent effects of stressor application on metastasis of tumor cells in the lung and its regulation by an immunomodulator in mice.

First Author  Ishihara Y Year  1999
Journal  Psychoneuroendocrinology Volume  24
Issue  7 Pages  713-26
PubMed ID  10451907 Mgi Jnum  J:57009
Mgi Id  MGI:1343028 Doi  10.1016/s0306-4530(99)00023-2
Citation  Ishihara Y, et al. (1999) Time-dependent effects of stressor application on metastasis of tumor cells in the lung and its regulation by an immunomodulator in mice. Psychoneuroendocrinology 24(7):713-26
abstractText  The effects of the timing of stressor application on transplanted tumor cells and its possible regulation by an immunomodulator was investigated. Male C57 BL/6N mice were subjected to rotational stressor for 7 days relative to tumor cell inoculation: stressor after inoculation of Lewis lung cancer cells, stressor during inoculation and stressor before inoculation. Stressor application and tumor cell inoculation induced transient decreases in body weight, particularly in mice stressed after inoculation. The mice exposed to the stressor during inoculation or before inoculation showed significant increases in the number of metastatic foci relative to control mice. Early administration of an immunomodulator, PSK, significantly attenuated the increase of metastatic foci in stressed mice. The weights of thymus gland and spleen at 14 days after inoculation were similar in the three stressor groups and the control group. Application of the stressor reduced NK cell activity of the normal mice as well as tumor bearing mice. The lowest pre-inoculation NK cell activity was observed in mice stressed for 7 days beginning on the day of inoculation. The NK cell activity decreased in the tumor bearing mice which were stressed at the time of tumor inoculation. Decreased NK cell activity was reversed at day 14 after tumor inoculation. The mice exposed to the stressor after inoculation showed lowest level of NK cell activity relative to mice exposed to the stressor before or during inoculation. The treatment of mice with PSK reduced these changes significantly. The present results suggest that the rotational stress reduces splenic NK cell activity, which may influence the magnitude of tumor metastasis, depending on the time of tumor cell injection. Further, administration of an immunomodulator may counteract the reduction of the NK cell activity.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

0 Bio Entities

0 Expression