免疫系统
心理压力
免疫学
抗原
战斗或逃跑反应
医学
心理学
生物
临床心理学
遗传学
基因
作者
Javier Aguilera‐Lizarraga,Cintya López-López,Josue Jaramillo-Polanco,Morgane Florens,Yang Yu,Quentin Tsang,Ananya Chakraborty,Sofie De Gand,Fedrica Pia,Runze Quan,María Cuende-Estévez,Samuel Van Remoortel,Jessica Strid,Alan Lomax,M. Cecilia Berin,Andrew W.B. Craig,Eva Kaufmann,Mark L. Ormiston,Stephen Vanner,Hind Hussein
标识
DOI:10.1053/j.gastro.2025.01.246
摘要
We recently showed that a bacterial infection can break oral tolerance to food and lead to IgE-dependent mast cell activation and food-induced abdominal pain, which could constitute an important pathogenic mechanism in post-infectious irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Here, we investigated whether similar immune mechanisms in response to psychological stress lead to food-evoked pain signaling, and thus potentially explain the pathophysiology in a larger group of patients with IBS. Mice were exposed to ovalbumin (OVA) during water avoidance stress (WAS) and re-exposed to OVA five weeks later. Nociception was evaluated by visceromotor responses and afferent nerve recordings to intestinal distension, and patch-clamp recordings of sensory neurons incubated with intestinal supernatants. The role of IgE and type 2 immunity was evaluated using pharmacological and genetic approaches. Re-exposure to OVA increased pain signaling in the colon and small intestine only in mice exposed to OVA during WAS, in the absence of systemic allergy. OVA-induced increases in pain responses depended on mast cells, IgE and STAT6 signaling. Notably, incubation of sensory neurons with ileum and colon supernatants from WAS/OVA+OVA mice lowered their threshold of excitability. Finally, treatment with histamine receptor H1 antagonist pyrilamine blocked the increased sensory neuron excitability, and reduced ileal afferent nerve firing to distension in WAS/OVA+OVA mice. Psychological stress induces a type 2 immune response to food antigens, with IgE-mediated mast cell activation and increased pain signaling in the small intestine and colon in response to food. These findings may explain the potential role of psychological stress in food-induced symptoms in IBS.
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