The importance of environment in the regulation of brain, behaviour and physiology has long been recognized in biological, social and medical sciences. Animals maintained under enriched conditions have clearly been shown to have better learning abilities than those maintained under standard conditions. However, the effects of environmental enrichment (EE) on immunity and emotionality have been less documented and remain questionable. Therefore, we investigated the effect of EE on natural killer (NK) cell activity, psychological stress responses and behavioural parameters. Male C3H mice were housed either in enriched or standard conditions for 6 weeks. Behaviour was then examined by the grip-strength test, staircase and elevated plus maze, and corticosterone levels and NK cell activity were measured. Furthermore, animals exposed to the stress paradigm, achieved by electric shock with reminders, were tested for freezing time in each reminder. Corticosterone levels were also measured. The EE mice showed decreased anxiety-like behaviour and higher activity compared to standard mice, as revealed by a greater percentage of time spent in the open arms of the elevated plus maze, and a higher rate of climbing the staircase. A shorter freezing time in the stress paradigm and no corticosterone level reactivity were measured in EE mice. In addition, NK cell activity in spleens of EE mice was higher than that demonstrated in those of standard mice. Thus, EE has a beneficial effect on anxiety-like behaviour, stress response and NK cell activity. The effect on NK cell activity is promising, due to the role of NK cells in host resistance.
Mechanisms underlying the age-related decrease in the developmental capacity of thymocyte progenitors from the bone marrow (BM) were analyzed, focussing on interaction of these cells with the thymic microenvironment. We employed the experimental model in which mixtures of young and old mouse BM cells, congenic for the Thy-1 marker, were seeded onto fetal thymus (FT) explains depleted of self lymphocytes and the levels of Thy-1+ cells developing from each of the two donor types were measured. When cells from young and old BM donors were seeded simultaneously, in saturating quantities, a higher level of T cells developed from the young donors. To find out whether there were originally more thymocyte progenitors in the young BM, we carried out the competitive colonization under limiting dilution conditions and found that the advantage of the young had diminished under these conditions, thus suggesting that the age-related changes could not be related solely to quantitative differences. We then incubated the FT sequentially with old donor cells for 24 h, followed by young for an additional 48 h and found that the advantage of the young progenitors was eliminated. We thus established that the initial stage of colonization of the FT was important in determining the outcome of the subsequent development. The kinetics of simultaneous competition within the FT, however, revealed that the advantage of the young BM-derived cells became significant only from day 7 in organ culture, thus suggesting that sequential divisions of these cells were at a higher level than those of the old. Recolonization of FT explants by young or old BM-derived thymocytes obtained from the first colonization of the FT stroma showed a reduced, but still significant advantage for the young BM-derived cells over the old. Thus, we concluded that the old BM thymocyte progenitors manifested a qualitative disadvantage which became apparent during competitive colonization of the FT.
Environmental enrichment is known to positively influence the organism's psychologic and physiologic well-being. However, the effects of environmental enrichment on immune responses and cancer prognosis have not been clearly established and its impact on cancer therapy is unknown. Here, we report that environmental enrichment mediated a statistically significant improvement of the outcome of immunotherapy in an experimental model of B-cell lymphoma. When mice were immunized with an idiotype-vaccine, those maintained under enriched environmental conditions produced statistically significant higher levels of anti-idiotype antibodies and revealed more attenuated tumor growth than those housed in standard environments. Most strikingly, enriched tumor-bearing mice had statistically significant prolonged survival, with 44% of them disease-free compared with 0% in the standard rearing tumor-bearing mice. The possible mechanisms for the enhancement of immunotherapy by environmental enrichment are cognitive, physical activity, and psychologic. The demonstration of synergistic effect of cancer therapy and environmental enrichment on tumor rejection has important implication for cancer treatment.
Indolent B-cell lymphomas are characterized by repeated remissions and relapses with most patients eventually dying of the disease. Although combination treatments with chemotherapy and the anti-CD20 antibody rituximab improved duration of remissions and overall survival, the disease is essentially incurable. Thus, novel therapeutic approaches are needed. One such approach is active immunization with dendritic cells (DCs). Given that rituximab depletes patients of normal B cells, optimal vaccination strategies for rituximab-treated patients require induction of effector T cells. We have previously demonstrated in a murine model that idiotype (Id)-keyhole limpet hemocyanin-pulsed DCs induced Id-reactive CD8 T cells and protection against tumor challenge in the absence of anti-Id antibodies. On the basis of these results, we investigated vaccination in a therapeutic model, in which mice carrying advanced tumors of the highly aggressive 38C-13 lymphoma were treated with chemotherapy and anti-CD20 antibodies combined with a DC-based vaccine. As a rule, cytoreduction by cyclophosphamide was required in each regimen of combination treatment, and vaccination with tumor cell-loaded DCs was more effective than vaccination with Id-keyhole limpet hemocyanin-loaded DCs. We demonstrated that under conditions of large primary tumors that had already spread to lymph nodes, when anti-CD20 antibody treatment showed minimal effect and DC vaccination had no effect, synergism between anti-CD20 antibodies and DC vaccines resulted in significant long-term survival that did not involve active antitumor antibody production. Combination treatments including tumor cell-loaded DC vaccines may therefore provide a strategy for enhancing the potency of therapy in rituximab-treated patients.
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