Inhibition of murine splenic T lymphocyte proliferation by 2-deoxy- D-glucose-induced metabolic stress

Female Swiss-Webster mice were injected with the glucose analogue 2-deoxy- D-glucose (2-DG), which when administered to rodents induces acute periods of metabolic stress. A single or multiple injections of 2-DG invoked a stress response, as evidenced by increases in serum corticosterone levels. The...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of neuroimmunology 1994-07, Vol.52 (2), p.165-173
Hauptverfasser: Miller, Edwin S., Klinger, Julio C., Akin, Cem, Anne Koebel, D., Sonnenfeld, Gerald
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Female Swiss-Webster mice were injected with the glucose analogue 2-deoxy- D-glucose (2-DG), which when administered to rodents induces acute periods of metabolic stress. A single or multiple injections of 2-DG invoked a stress response, as evidenced by increases in serum corticosterone levels. The influence of this metabolic stressor on the blastogenic potential of splenic T lymphocytes was then examined. It was found that one, two, or three injections of 2-DG resulted in depressed T cell proliferative responses, with an attenuation of the effect occurring by the fifth injection. The 2-DG-induced inhibition of T cell proliferation was not attributable to 2-DG-induced cytolysis, as in vitro incubation of naive T cells with varying concentrations of 2-DG did not result in a reduction in cell number or viability, and flow cytometric analysis demonstrated that percentages of CD3, CD4. and CD8 splenic T cells were not altered as a result of 2-DG-induced stress. Incubating naive T cells in varying concentrations of 2-DG resulted in a dose-dependent inhibition of T cell blastogenic potential. Following in vivo exposure to 2-DG, T cell proliferation did not return to normal levels until 3 days after the cessation of 2-DG injections. Administering the β-adrenergic receptor antagonist propranolol did not reverse the inhibited lymphoproliferation in 2-DG-treated mice. The inhibition in T cell proliferation was not observed, however, in mice that had been adrenalectomized or hypophysectomized and injected with 2-DG. Collectively, these results demonstrate that 2-DG-induced metabolic stress has the capacity to inhibit mitogen-stimulated T cell blastogenesis, presumably through neuroendocrine axis-mediated mechanisms, which may have important implications in the capacity of the host to resist microbial infection and neoplasia.
ISSN:0165-5728
1872-8421
DOI:10.1016/0165-5728(94)90110-4