The telencephalon is a neuronal substrate for systemic inflammatory responses in teleosts via polyamine metabolism
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Mani, Amir; Haddad, Farah; Barreda, Daniel R.; Salinas, Irene
署名单位:
University of New Mexico; University of Alberta; University of Alberta
刊物名称:
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ISSN/ISSBN:
0027-12317
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.2404781121
发表日期:
2024-09-24
关键词:
ornithine-decarboxylase
behavioral fever
hippocampal pallium
septic shock
cell-growth
c-fos
cytokine
interleukin-6
goldfish
brain
摘要:
Systemic inflammation elicits sickness behaviors and fever by engaging a complex neuronal circuitry that begins in the preoptic area of the hypothalamus. Ectotherms such as teleost fish display sickness behaviors in response to infection or inflammation, seeking warmer temperatures to enhance survival via behavioral fever responses. To date, the hypothalamus is the only brain region implicated in sickness behaviors and behavioral fever in teleosts. Yet, the complexity of neurobehavioral manifestations underlying sickness responses in teleosts suggests engagement of higher processing areas of the brain. Using in vivo models of systemic inflammation in rainbow trout, we find canonical pyrogenic cytokine responses in the hypothalamus whereas in the telencephalon and the optic tectum il-1b and tnfa expression is decoupled from il- 6 expression. Polyamine metabolism changes, characterized by accumulation of putrescine and decreases in spermine and spermidine, are recorded in the telencephalon but not hypothalamus upon systemic injection of bacteria. While systemic inflammation causes canonical behavioral fever in trout, blockade of bacterial polyamine metabolism prior to injection abrogates behavioral fever, polyamine responses, and telencephalic but not hypothalamic cytokine responses. Combined, our work identifies the telencephalon as a neuronal substrate for brain responses to systemic inflammation in teleosts and uncovers the role of polyamines as critical chemical mediators in sickness behaviors.