Immunity system complexity: the brain's involvement (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Thursday, July 27, 2023, 18:36 (485 days ago) @ David Turell

New brain area found which supervises inflammations' responses:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/07/230725123050.htm

"A multidisciplinary team of scientists from the Institut Pasteur, CNRS and Inserm have revealed the existence of a circuit involved in sensing and also in the regulation of the anti-inflammatory response orchestrated by different brain regions. This circuit detects inflammation in the blood and organizes and regulates the immune response. It embodies a two-way connection between the brain and immune system.

***

"Whenever infections or injuries occur, the immune system is triggered to control the infection and repair damaged tissue. This process involves the release of pro-inflammatory mediators that inform the brain of the body's immune status and coordinate the immune response. In response to this signal, the brain triggers a complex reaction known as "sickness behavior" whose purpose is to reassign energy to the body's different systems. This state is associated with behavioral changes including social avoidance and lethargy, metabolic adjustments such as fever and loss of appetite, and the release of hormones such as cortisone, to increase resistance to infection while also regulating immune responses...A region of the brainstem known as the vagal complex directly detects levels and types of inflammatory hormones in the bloodstream. This information is then relayed to neurons in another region of the brainstem called the parabrachial nucleus, which also receives information related to pain and certain aversive or traumatic memories. In turn, these neurons activate neurons in the hypothalamus leading to a rapid increase in cortisone, a hormone with anti-inflammatory properties, in the blood. (my bold)

***

"The experts observed how the activity of specific neurons in the parabrachial nucleus could regulate the production of white blood cells involved in the immune response. "This research demonstrates that neural activity in the brain alone can have a powerful effect on the development of immune responses during infection or injury. It therefore provides a clear example of the powerful two-way connection between the body and brain. It also fuels our ambition to discover the impact of our brain on the way we interact with microbes, fight off pathogens and heal wounds," explains GĂ©rard Eberl.

***

"Given the established role of the parabrachial nucleus in aversive memory processes, potential infectious threats could be averted if this circuit is reactivated by the memory of past inflammatory or aversive experiences. Drawing on this neuro-immune communication, the immune system could therefore benefit from the brain's ability to predict and anticipate threats in our environment."

Comment: no surprise at the brain's involvement. Note my bold. The Vagus nerve travels everywhere in the abdominal cavity and elsewhere in the body as acontrol conduit.


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