Individual differences in the peripheral immune system promote resilience versus susceptibility to social stress

Georgia E. Hodes(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Madeline L. Pfau(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Marylène Leboeuf(Gene Therapy Laboratory), Sam A. Golden(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Daniel J. Christoffel(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Dana Bregman(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Nicole Rebusi(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Mitra Heshmati(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Hossein Aleyasin(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Brandon L. Warren(Florida State University), Benoît Labonté(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Sarah R. Horn(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Kyle Lapidus(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Viktoria Stelzhammer(University of Cambridge), Erik H.F. Wong(AstraZeneca (United States)), Sabine Bahn(University of Cambridge), Vaishnav Krishnan(Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center), Carlos A. Bolaños‐Guzmán(Florida State University), James W. Murrough(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Miriam Mérad(Gene Therapy Laboratory), Scott J. Russo(Allen Institute for Brain Science)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
October 20, 2014
Cited by 700Open Access
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Abstract

Depression and anxiety disorders are associated with increased release of peripheral cytokines; however, their functional relevance remains unknown. Using a social stress model in mice, we find preexisting individual differences in the sensitivity of the peripheral immune system that predict and promote vulnerability to social stress. Cytokine profiles were obtained 20 min after the first social stress exposure. Of the cytokines regulated by stress, IL-6 was most highly up-regulated only in mice that ultimately developed a susceptible behavioral phenotype following a subsequent chronic stress, and levels remained elevated for at least 1 mo. We confirmed a similar elevation of serum IL-6 in two separate cohorts of patients with treatment-resistant major depressive disorder. Before any physical contact in mice, we observed individual differences in IL-6 levels from ex vivo stimulated leukocytes that predict susceptibility versus resilience to a subsequent stressor. To shift the sensitivity of the peripheral immune system to a pro- or antidepressant state, bone marrow (BM) chimeras were generated by transplanting hematopoietic progenitor cells from stress-susceptible mice releasing high IL-6 or from IL-6 knockout (IL-6(-/-)) mice. Stress-susceptible BM chimeras exhibited increased social avoidance behavior after exposure to either subthreshold repeated social defeat stress (RSDS) or a purely emotional stressor termed witness defeat. IL-6(-/-) BM chimeric and IL-6(-/-) mice, as well as those treated with a systemic IL-6 monoclonal antibody, were resilient to social stress. These data establish that preexisting differences in stress-responsive IL-6 release from BM-derived leukocytes functionally contribute to social stress-induced behavioral abnormalities.


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