Research Paper Details
Paper Abstract
The study compares the impact of acute and chronic social confrontation on aspects of blood cellular immunity in Long-Evans intruder rats. An adult male was introduced for either 2 h or 48 h into a male-female resident group, which resulted in fights for dominance. Thirty-eight of the 42 intruders became losers. For immunologic measurements, blood samples were taken from the intruders before confrontation (baseline) and 2 h or 48 h after the beginning of confrontation. Two h of confrontation resulted in increased granulocyte (+65%) and decreased lymphocyte numbers (-60%), as well as in differential reductions in CD4, CD8, and B cell numbers. CD4/CD8 and T/B ratios were elevated. T cell responsiveness to ConA was markedly suppressed in proliferation assays using either whole blood (-90%) or PBMC (-50%). The direction of changes in leukocyte and lymphocyte subsets after 48 h resembled in many aspects the 2 h changes, although with lower magnitude. In contrast to acute stress, a lowered T/B cells ratio and unaffected CD4/CD8 ratio was determined after 48 h. Proliferative response of T cells was lowered by about 25% in the whole blood assay; but unaffected in the PBMC assay. Significant correlations were found between the amount of submissive behavior displayed by the losers and several immunologic measures after 2 h of confrontation. The data suggest that acute and chronic stressful conditions may not necessarily result in similar effects on immune functioning. This should be considered when evaluating the biologic and evolutionary consequences of social stress-induced immune alterations.
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