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Homeostasis 3
Árpád Dobolyi
Laboratory of Molecular and Systems Neurobiology,
Department of Physiology and Neurobiology, Eötvös
Loránd University
Outline of the lecture
1. Internal environment of living organisms
2. Homeostatic regulations – the endocrine system
3. Examples of homeostatic regulations not
requiring the nervous system
4. Homeostatic regulations – nervous system
5. Examples of regulations involving the brain
– Water balance
– Body temperature regulation
6. Homeostatic regulations – immune system
7. The role of the nervous system in immune
regulations
Heat produced by basal metabolism
Energy produced by basal metablism leaves the body in the form of
heat. It depends on the size of the animals:
- Heat produced by bigger animals is larger
- Heat produced per body weight decreases with the size of the
animal
Rubner’s surface area law: heat produced by the basal metabolism
of animals is proportional with their surface area rather than their
body weight.
More precisely: Heat produced by basal metabolism is proportional
to W0.75 , where W is the body weight. Thus, heat production is 290
KJ/W0.75, and does not depend on the individual or the species.
Factors determining heat balance of animals
Animals with
constant body
temperature thrive for
heat balance:
Heat loss =
heat taken from the
environment + heat
produced by the body
Red color:
controlability
1. In response to small alterations from set point body temperature, animals first change the circulation of the skin:
• If ambient temperature decreases, skin arterioles contract thereby decreasing heat dissipation
• If ambient temperature increases, skin arterioles dilatate thereby increasing heat dissipation
Body temperature control 1.
In response to larger alterations from set point body temperature:
A. In cold environment
• Heat production by the brown adipose tissue is activated
• Muscle contraction can further increase heat production
(shivering)
• Activation of thyroid hormone production increases metabolism
by enhancing cellular oxidation
• Appropriate behavioral changes
B. In warm environment
• Enhanced ventillation of the lung
• Sweating starts, water evaporates from the skin
• Appropriate behavioral changes
Body temperature control 2.
Mechanism of heat production in brown adipose tissue
If the inner membrane of mitochondrium leaks H-ions then heat is produced instead of ATP
If previous measures were insufficient and body
temperature alteration is life-threatening:
A. In cold environment
• Due to the activation of stress axis, cellular metabolism is
further increased
B. In hot environment
• Heart frequency and blood circulation increases
Body temperature control 3.
Slower adaptations to changes of long-time
alterations of ambient temperature:
1. Alterations of thermal insulation:
- adiposity depos build up
- Changes of outer integument
(e.g. seasonal changes of hair, feather)
2. Appropriate behavioral changes
Body temperature control 4.
Temperature receptors: transients receptor potential (TRP) channels
Etain A. Tansey, and Christopher D. Johnson Advan in Physiol Edu 2015;39:139-148.
Temperature receptors (TRP channels) are located
on free (or bare) nerve terminals in the skin
Thin myelinated (Aδ) or
unmyelinated axons (C)
A
C
A A
A termosensitive (cold) fibers
termination: lamina I
lamina IIa
lamina V
C termosensitive (warm) fibers
termination : lamina IIb
Termination of heat-
sensitive primary
afferents in the
spinal cord
Pathways of heat sensation and heat
localization (only ascending)
- spinothalamic tract
- trigeminothalamic tract
Thermoregulatory pathways
- ascending and descending
Pathways of thermal stress (only descending)
Neuronal pathways carrying temperature
information
The ventral
posterolateral
nucleus of the
thalamus (VPL)
relays sensory
inputs from the
body to the
cerebral cortex
Thermoregulatory
pathways
DH: dorsal horn of spinal cord
LPB: lateral parabrachial nucleus
POA: preoptikus terület
MnPO: median preoptic nucleus
MPA: medial preoptic area
CVC: cutaneous vasoconstrictor
W-S: warm-sensitive
DMH: dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus
rRPA: rostral raphe pallidus
VH: ventral horn of spinal cord
IML: intermediolateral cell column
BAT: brown adipose tissue
Lateral parabrachial nucleus (LPBN)
scp: superior cerebellar peduncle = brachium superior
Heat-sensitive neurons in the preoptic region of the hypothalamus
•: Cells reacting to central and peripheral change of temperature
Summation of peripheral and central input on heat-
sensitive neurons of the medial preoptic area
a, b: activation of peripheral warm-sensitive receptors
c-d: activation of central warm-sensitive receptors
e: activation of central cold-sensitive receptors
Thermoregulatory
patyways
DH: dorsal horn of spinal cord
LPB: lateral parabrachial nucleus
POA: preoptikus terület
MnPO: median preoptic nucleus
MPA: medial preoptic area
CVC: cutaneous vasoconstrictor
W-S: warm-sensitive
DMH: dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus
rRPA: rostral raphe pallidus
VH: ventral horn of spinal cord
IML: intermediolateral cell column
BAT: brown adipose tissue
Location of the dorsomedial nucleus in the
hypothalamus and the raphe pallidus in the medulla
In response to larger alterations from set point body temperature:
A. In cold environment
• Heat production by the brown adipose tissue is activated
• Muscle contraction can further increase heat production
(shivering)
• Activation of thyroid hormone production increases metabolism
by enhancing cellular oxidation
• Appropriate behavioral changes
B. In warm environment – neuronal pathways are not known
• Enhanced ventillation of the lung
• Sweating starts, water evaporates from the skin
• Appropriate behavioral changes
Body temperature control 2.
Neuroendocrine and
descending
thermoregulatoy
pathways controlling
the secretion of
thyroid hormones
If previous measures were insufficient and body
temperature alteration is life-threatening:
A. In cold environment
• Due to the activation of stress axis, cellular metabolism is
further increased
B. In hot environment
• Heart frequency and blood circulation increases
Body temperature control 3.
Pathways of heat
stress
When the set point of body temperature
regulation in increased: fever
• The effects of fever:
– Proliferation of bacteria and viruses decreases
– T–cell proliferation increases
– Lymphocyte transformation is enhanced
– Gamma-interferon production is elevated
Pyrogenes
• Any substance that leads to fever
• Endogenous pyrogenes:
- Some cytokines produced by macrophages:
Interleukin 1 (α és β), interleukin 6 (IL-6) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFα)
• Exogenous pyrogenes:
- Any inflammatory reaction that activates macrophages. Bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is particularly effective in inducing fever
Mechanism of action: Pyrogenes result in the production of prostaglandin E2-t (PGE2). PGE2 acts on the hypothalamus to increase the set point. Consequently, the body produces heat and decreases its dissipation.
Humoral and neuronal
hypothesis of fever
pirogene
citokynes
C5a
IL-1
TNF-
IL-6
Endothel /
microglia
PGE2
Prosztaglandin E receptor 3
in preoptic neuros
Dorsomedial
hypothalamus
(DMH)
Thermogenesis
Het loss (vasokonstriction
a bőrben)
Synthesis of Prosta-
glandin E2 (PGE2)
• From arachidonic acid
• Using the following enzymes:
– phospholipase A2 (PLA2),
– cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2),
– prostaglandin E2 synthase
• Pyrogenes stimulate the
enzymes thereby inducing
PGE2 synthesis
Anti-fever drugs inhibit these
enzymes
Location of the
action of PGE2
within the
thermoregulatory
pathway
Tr. spinothalamicus
Outline of the lecture
1. Internal environment of living organisms
2. Homeostatic regulations – the endocrine system
3. Examples of homeostatic regulations not
requiring the nervous system
4. Homeostatic regulations – nervous system
5. Examples of regulations involving the brain
– Water balance
– Body temperature regulation
6. Homeostatic regulations – immune system
7. The role of the nervous system in immune
regulations
Immune system
Function
– Defense against tissue damage: • Bacterial or viral infection, other pathogens
• Ischemic, traumatic damage
• Bleeding
• Tumor cells
Components
– Barriers: skin, mucose, lung, blood-brain barrier
– Innate (or natural) immune system
– Adaptive immune system
Innate immune system:
inflammatory processes
Not antigen-specific Antigen-specific
Has no memory Does have a memory
Works immediately Works with a latency
Linearly amplified Exponentially amplified
Comparison of innate and adaptive
immune systems
Adaptive immune system:
Does not have a threshold Does have a threshold
33
AFR
Inflammatory processes can be divided
into 2 steps
Step 1: inflammation Step 2: acute phase reaction (APR)
Immediate Starts with a latency
Local Systemal
Without threshold
Goal: separation and elimination of damages tissue, regeneration
Goal: maintain inflammation but also prevent its spreading
Above threshold
Initiation (0-6 hours)
Bleeding
Thrombo-
cyte
activation
IL-1
Bacteria
Complement
activation
C5a C3a
Necrosis
Phagocyte
activation
ROI
TNF-, IL-1
lipids
IL: interleukin; ROI: reaktíve oxygen intermedier, TNF: tumor nekrosis factor
Virus-infected
cell
Machanisms how bacteria can activate phagocytes
Receptors on the surface of phagocytes::
1. Pattern recognition receptors
E.g. Lipopolysaccharid (LPS; a bacterial
endotoxin) receptor: CD14(+TLR4)
2. Receptors of the complement system
3. IgG receptors
Phagocytes are resident macrophages
and arriving granulocytes.
Their response to activation:
1. Phagocyte bacteria
2. Production of cytokines
©Fülöp AK 2010 37
Cytokines produced by macrophages and their functions
©Fülöp AK 2010 38
Mast cell activation
results in:
1. degranulation
2. lipid mediators
3. cytokine production
Consequences:
- Vasodilatation
- Increase of tissue
permeability
- Pain
- Activation of
additional cells
! ! !
Vasodilatory effect of histamine
Leukocyte infiltration to the site of inflammation
Transendothelial Migration
Vessel Lumen
Firm Adhesion
Activated Integrin
Rolling Adhesion
VCAM Selectin
Expression
Leukocyte
Selectin
Resting State
Inactive Integrin
Selectin Counter-receptor
Endothelial Cell
Subendothelial Matrix
Inflammatory Stimulus
Cytokine receptors
Signal transduction of IL-1
Progression (6-12 hours)
Early mediators
Targets:
Phagocytes,
endothel,
fibroblast,
mast cell,
keratinocyte,
TH2
Systemic
cytokines:
TNF,
IL-1,
IL-6
INFg
Liver
Bone
marrow
Adipose
tissue
CNS
Production of
proteins
Leukocytosis
Lipid
mobilisation
Anti-
inflammation
Inflammation Acute phase reaction (APR)
Adaptive response
Outline of the lecture
1. Internal environment of living organisms
2. Homeostatic regulations – the endocrine system
3. Examples of homeostatic regulations not
requiring the nervous system
4. Homeostatic regulations – nervous system
5. Examples of regulations involving the brain
– Water balance
– Body temperature regulation
6. Homeostatic regulations – immune system
7. The role of the nervous system in immune
regulations
Acute phase reaction of the central
nervous system
Systemic cytokines activate the hypothalamus
– Systemic inhibition of the
immune system
• HPA axis
• Vegetative nervous system
– Fever
– Behavioral effects:
• No appetite
• Drowsiness
• Lack of exploratory and
sexual behaviors
Relationship of the immune system with the
HPA (Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal) axis
Cytokine
Hypothalamus
Pituitary gland
Adrenal gland
IL1, IL6, TNF, INFg
CRH (Corticotropin Releasing
Hormone)
ACTH (Adrenocorticotropic
Hormone)
Glucocorticoid
Immune system
Paraventricular nucleus in the anterior hypothalamic region
Paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus
Corticotropin-releasing hormon (CRH)-expressing neurons in the PVN
Initiation of CNS acute phase reaction: activation of
PVN neurons by IL-1 as compared to other stressors
Paraventricular nucleus (PVN) – c-Fos immunolabeling
Anti-inflammatory actions of corticosteroids
Activity Effect
IL-1, TNF, GM-CSF,
IL-3, IL-4. IL-5, IL-8
Inflammation
(mediated
by cytokines)
NOS NO
Foszfolipase A2
Ciklooxygenase2
Prostaglandins,
leukotriens
Adhesion molecules Reduced migration
Induction of
endonucleases
Apoptosis
(limfocytes, leukocytes)
4,000-
2,000-
400-
300-
100-
10,000-
Neutrophil granulocytes
Lymphocytes
Eozinophils
Monocytes
Basophils
6 h 12 h 24 h
Sejt
/mm
3
The effect of glucocorticoids on the
number of leukocytes
To eliminate unwanted immune response:
- Allergy
- Autoimmune diseases
- Organ transplant
a, Antigene-specific immune suppression – selective tolerance
b, Not-antigene- specific
• Corticosteroids (in supraphysiological, pharmacological doses)
• CY-A, FK 506, Rapamycin (T cell proliferation inhibitor)
• Radiation therapy
• Cytostatics
Immunosuppression therapy
O
OH
O O
O
O
Cortizon
Prednizon
(4x more effective
than Cortizon)
Cortisol
Prednizolon
Synthetic products:
Natural and artificial glococorticoids
CH2OH
C=O OH
CH2OH
C=O OH
CH2OH
C=O OH
CH2OH
C=O OH
O
Anti-inflammatory mechanism of glucocorticoids
GRE: glucocorticoid receptor element
Sites of action of cytokines in the CNS
- Through circumventricular organs and also through viscerosensory nerves
- It may depend on the type of mediator and its concentration
Circumventricular organs – humoral inputs
The effect of
IL-1 on
neuronal
activation
(c-fos
expression)
in different
brain areas
Activity of the vagal nerve in response to IL-1
injection
IL-1
The role of nociceptive sensory
system in inflammation
• Tryptase released by mast cells stimulates
nociceptive sensory terminals, which contributes to
the activation of HPA axis.
In additon:
• Substance P is released from the sensory terminals
upon inflammation
• G-protein coupled receptor of substance P is
present in macrophages, through which substance P
increases inflammation
Innervation of the immune system
Hypothalamo-spinal tract and other
descending pathways regulating vegetative
functions
The effect of the sympathetic
nervous system on the
immune system
Macrophages and lymphocytes possess beta 2 adrenerg receptors, which inhibit their actions
Preganglionic
neuron
Noradrenaline
Postganglionic
neuron
Nikotinic
receptor
Ach
Adrenerg
receptor
Target
organ
Additional effects of the sympathetic nervous
system on inflammation
- In additon to noradrenaline, dopamine and neuropeptide Y are also released from
sympathetic terminals
- Immune cells have receptors for these modulators as well, through which they
inhibit their migration, activation and proliferation, which all contribute to the
localization of inflammation
©Fülöp AK 2010
Neuro-
modulation of
inflammation
1. sensory
terminal
(stimulatory)
2. sympath.
(inhibitory)
3. parasymp.
(inhibitory)
Acute phase reaction of the central
nervous system
Systemic cytokines activate the hypothalamus
– Systemic inhibition of the
immune system
• HPA axis
• Vegetative nervous system
– Fever
– Behavioral effects:
• No appetite
• Drowsiness
• Lack of exploratory and
sexual behaviors
Systemic inflammatory mediators reduce appetite by
acting on hypothalamic food intake regulatory neurons
Additional effect of inflammatory hormones on energy
homeostasis
LPL: Lipoprotein lipase, NF: nuclear factor
Immune activation produces sickness behaviors,
symptomes that resemble to depression
Thank you for your
attention!