Publications by authors named "Cornelia Kiank"

It is increasingly recognized that psychological stress influences inflammatory responses and mood. Here, we investigated whether psychological stress (combined acoustic and restraint stress) activates the tryptophan (Trp) catabolizing enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 1(IDO1) and thereby alters the immune homeostasis and behavior in mice. We measured IDO1 mRNA expression and plasma levels of Trp catabolites after a single 2-h stress session and in repeatedly stressed (4.

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Background: Laboratory routine procedures such as handling, injection, gavage or transportation are stressful events which may influence physiological parameters of laboratory animals and may interfere with the interpretation of the experimental results. Here, we investigated if female BALB/c mice derived from in-house breeding and BALB/c mice from a vendor which were shipped during their juvenile life differ in their HPA axis activity and stress responsiveness in adulthood.

Results: We show that already transferring the home cage to another room is a stressful event which causes an increased HPA axis activation for at least 24 hours as well as a loss of circulating lymphocytes which normalizes during a few days after transportation.

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Article Synopsis
  • Different mouse strains, like BALB/c mice, react to stress in their own ways, influenced by their genetics and early life experiences.
  • In this study, researchers examined how a mild stress of being separated from their mother affected adult mice's ability to handle stress.
  • The results showed that mice who experienced early separation were better at dealing with stress later in life, showing less weight loss and fewer health issues compared to mice who weren't separated.
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The interaction between gut inflammatory processes and stress is gaining increasing recognition. Corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF)-receptor activation in the brain is well established as a key signaling pathway initiating the various components of the stress response including in the viscera. In addition, a local CRF signaling system has been recently established in the gut.

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Functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGIDs), which include irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), encompass a heterogeneous group of diseases identified by chronic or recurrent symptom-based diagnostic criteria. Psychosocial factors are key components in the outcome of clinical manifestations of IBS symptoms. Anxiogenic and endocrine responses to stress are mediated by the corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF)-CRF1 receptor pathway.

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Using a combination of transcriptional profiling and Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA, www.ingenuity.com) we investigated acute and chronic psychological stress induced alterations of hepatic gene expression of BALB/c mice.

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Recently, we have shown that female BALB/c mice are highly sensitive to chronic psychological stress. They develop systemic neuroendocrine disturbances, a hypermetabolic syndrome, behavioral alterations and severe immunosuppression with a reduced antibacterial response during experimental infection. Here, we show that chronically stressed mice spontaneously suffered from increased bacterial load in the liver and lung that sustained for up to 10 days after the termination of stress exposure.

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Article Synopsis
  • Stress can really mess with how our bodies work, especially in mice that go through a lot of it.
  • After being stressed out multiple times, these mice showed serious health problems like losing weight and having high sugar and fat levels in their blood.
  • If a mouse only gets stressed once, it doesn't cause as many health changes, but being stressed repeatedly is way worse for their energy and ability to deal with other illnesses.
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Objective: In this study, we analyzed seasonal variations of immunoreactivity using a model of septic shock and a model of immunosuppression induced by chronic stress in mice.

Design: Retrospective comparative study using animals of experiments performed between 2001 and 2006 to identify seasonal variations in inflammatory responsiveness of mice.

Setting: University-based research laboratory.

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Septic patients show individually different courses of disease that are hard to predict. Little is known about preconditioning influences that may render one person liable to have overwhelming hyperinflammatory response syndrome (systemic inflammatory response syndrome) and another from compensatory anti-inflammatory response syndrome. Here, we show in a murine model that chronic psychological stress before the onset of polymicrobial peritonitis influences the balance between both types of immune response.

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