Maj-Britt Niemi
ETH Zurich
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Publication
Featured researches published by Maj-Britt Niemi.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2005
Gustavo Pacheco-López; Maj-Britt Niemi; Wei Kou; Margarete Härting; Joachim Fandrey; Manfred Schedlowski
We have previously demonstrated behaviorally conditioned immunosuppression using cyclosporin A as an unconditioned stimulus and saccharin as a conditioned stimulus. In the current study, we examined the central processing of this phenomenon generating excitotoxic lesions before and after acquisition to discriminate between learning and memory processes. Three different brain areas were analyzed: insular cortex (IC), amygdala (Am), and ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus (VMH). The results demonstrate that IC lesions performed before and after acquisition disrupted the behavioral component of the conditioned response (taste aversion). In contrast, Am and VMH lesions did not affect conditioned taste aversion. The behaviorally conditioned suppression of splenocyte proliferation and cytokine production (interleukin-2 and interferon-γ) was differentially affected by the excitotoxic lesions, showing that the IC is essential to acquire and evoke this conditioned response of the immune system. In contrast, the Am seems to mediate the input of visceral information necessary at the acquisition time, whereas the VMH appears to participate within the output pathway to the immune system necessary to evoke the behavioral conditioned immune response. The present data reveal relevant neural mechanisms underlying the learning and memory processes of behaviorally conditioned immunosuppression.
Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2011
Harald Engler; Raphael Doenlen; Andrea Engler; Carsten Riether; Geraldine Prager; Maj-Britt Niemi; Gustavo Pacheco-López; Ute Krügel; Manfred Schedlowski
The amygdala, a group of nuclei located in the medial temporal lobe, is a key limbic structure involved in mood regulation, associative learning, and modulation of cognitive functions. Functional neuroanatomical studies suggest that this brain region plays also an important role in the central integration of afferent signals from the peripheral immune system. In the present study, intracerebral electroencephalography and microdialysis were employed to investigate the electrophysiological and neurochemical consequences of systemic immune activation in the amygdala of freely moving rats. Intraperitoneal administration of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (100 μg/kg) induced with a latency of about 2 h a significant increase in amygdaloid neuronal activity and a substantial rise in extracellular noradrenaline levels. Activated neurons in the amygdaloid complex, identified by c-Fos immunohistochemistry, were mainly located in the central nucleus and, to a lesser extent, in the basolateral nucleus of the amygdala. Gene expression analysis in micropunches of the amygdala revealed that endotoxin administration induced a strong time-dependent increase in IL-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α mRNA levels indicating that these cytokines are de novo synthesized in the amygdala in response to peripheral immune activation. The changes in amygdaloid activity were timely related to an increase in anxiety-like behavior and decreased locomotor activity and exploration in the open-field. Taken together, these data give novel insights into different features of the acute amygdaloid response during experimental inflammation and provides further evidence that the amygdala integrates immune-derived information to coordinate behavioral and autonomic responses.
Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2009
Harald Engler; Raphael Doenlen; Carsten Riether; Andrea Engler; Maj-Britt Niemi; Hugo O. Besedovsky; Adriana del Rey; Gustavo Pacheco-López; Joram Feldon; Manfred Schedlowski
Dysfunction of the central dopaminergic system is associated with neurodegenerative disorders and mental illnesses such as Parkinsons disease and schizophrenia. Patients suffering from these diseases were reported to exhibit altered immune functions compared to healthy subjects and imbalance of the central dopaminergic system has been suggested as one causative factor for the immune disturbances. However, it is unclear whether the observed immune changes are primary or secondary to the disease. Here we demonstrate that central dopamine (DA) depletion in a rat model of Parkinsons disease induced transient changes in blood leukocyte distribution and cytokine production that were apparent until four weeks after bilateral intrastriatal administration of the neurotoxin 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA). Eight weeks after treatment, no differences in blood immune parameters were anymore evident between neurotoxin-treated and control animals. Nevertheless, animals with a widespread damage of dopaminergic neurons in the nigrostriatal system showed an exacerbated pro-inflammatory response following in vivo challenge with bacterial lipopolysaccharide. Our data indicate that peripheral immune perturbations in the early phase after intrastriatal 6-OHDA administration might have been related to the neurodegenerative process itself whereas the increased sensitivity to the inflammatory stimulus seems to have resulted from an impaired dopaminergic control of prolactin (PRL) and corticosterone (CORT) secretion. The findings demonstrate that the brain dopaminergic system is involved in peripheral immune regulation and suggest that central dopaminergic hypoactivity bears the risk of excessive inflammation, e.g., during infection or tissue injury.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2003
Gustavo Pacheco-López; Maj-Britt Niemi; Wei Kou; Andre Bildhäuser; Claus M. Gross; Marion U. Goebel; Adriana del Rey; Hugo O. Besedovsky; Manfred Schedlowski
Experimental and clinical evidence has demonstrated extensive communication between the CNS and the immune system. To analyse the role of central catecholamines in modulating peripheral immune functions, we injected the neurotoxin 6‐hydroxydopamine (6‐OHDA) i.c.v. in rats. This treatment significantly reduced brain catecholamine content 2, 4 and 7 days after injection, and in the periphery splenic catecholamine levels were reduced 4 days after treatment. Central catecholamine depletion induced an inhibition of splenic and blood lymphocyte proliferation and splenic cytokine production and expression (interleukin‐2 and interferon‐γ) 7 days after injection. In addition, central treatment with 6‐OHDA reduced the percentage of spleen and peripheral blood natural killer (CD161 +) cells, and T‐cytotoxic (CD8 +) cells in peripheral blood. The reduction in splenocyte proliferation was not associated with a glucocorticoid alteration but was completely abolished by prior peripheral sympathectomy. These data demonstrate a crucial role of central and peripheral catecholamines in modulating immune function.
Journal of Neuroimmunology | 2007
Maj-Britt Niemi; Margarete Härting; Wei Kou; Adriana del Rey; Hugo O. Besedovsky; Manfred Schedlowski; Gustavo Pacheco-López
Several Pavlovian conditioning paradigms have documented the brains abilities to sense immune-derived signals or immune status, associate them with concurrently relevant extereoceptive stimuli, and reinstate such immune responses on demand. Specifically, the naturalistic relation of food ingestion with its possible immune consequences facilitates taste-immune associations. Here we demonstrate that the saccharin taste can be associated with the immunosuppressive agent cyclosporine A, and that such taste-immune associative learning is subject to reinforcement. Furthermore, once consolidated, this saccharin-immunosuppression engram is resistant to extinction when avoidance behavior is assessed. More importantly, the more this engram is activated, either at association or extinction phases, the more pronounced is the conditioned immunosuppression.
Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2006
Maj-Britt Niemi; Gustavo Pacheco-López; Wei Kou; Margarete Härting; Adriana del Rey; Hugo O. Besedovsky; Manfred Schedlowski
Taste-immune associative learning can result from contingent pairings of an immune-competent unconditioned stimulus (US) with a gustative conditioned stimulus (CS). Recalling such an association may induce a set of physiological responses affecting behavior, endocrine, and immune functions. We have established a model of behaviorally conditioned immunosuppression employing the immunosuppressant drug cyclosporine A (CsA) as the US and saccharin as the CS in rats and humans. In order to investigate the inter-species generalization of this neuro-immune interaction, we tested the feasibility of this paradigm in mice. In a single-bottle scheme, male BALB/c mice (n=5) were conditioned by conducting three association trials and a single recall trial. Control groups (n=5/group) were designed to assure associative learning, pharmacological effects of the US, and placebo effect. Results show that CsA-conditioned animals displayed significant immunosuppression in the spleen after recall, measured by in vitro T-lymphocyte proliferation, and IL-2 production. However, the same animals did not show evidence of avoidance behavior to the CS. In contrast, evoking the association of saccharin-lithium chloride (inducing gastric malaise) in another set of animals (n=4/group) resulted in significant and pronounced avoidance of the taste (CS). These animals also displayed significant suppression of splenic T-lymphocyte responsiveness after the recall phase. The present results indicate that mice seem to be capable of associating a gustative stimulus with CsA, resulting in behaviorally conditioned immunosuppression without affecting appetitive behavior.
Physiology & Behavior | 2008
Gustavo Pacheco-López; Maj-Britt Niemi; Harald Engler; Andrea Engler; Carsten Riether; Raphael Doenlen; E. Espinosa; R. Oberbeck; Manfred Schedlowski
In naive individuals, the administration of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) provokes a rapid systemic increase in pro-inflammatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, interleukin (IL)-1beta and IL-6, inducing an acute phase response including sickness behavior. Strong associative learning occurs when relevant gustatory/olfactory stimuli precede the activation of the immune system, affecting long-term individual food selection and nutritional strategies. Repeated LPS administration results in the development of an endotoxin tolerance status, characterized by a drastic reduction in the LPS-induced cytokine response. Here we investigated how the postprandial categorization of a relevant taste (0.2% saccharin) changed after administration of a high dose of LPS (0.5 mg/kg i.p.) in LPS-tolerant animals. Determination of the consummatory fluid intake revealed that, in contrast to LPS-naive rats, taste-LPS association did not occur during endotoxin tolerance. Ninety minutes after the single association trial, the plasma responses of TNF-alpha, IL-1beta and IL-6 were completely blunted in LPS-tolerant animals, which also resulted in low LPS-adipsogenic and LPS-anorexic effects. These findings indicate that an identical immune challenge can result in completely different neuro-behavioral consequences depending on the immune history of the individual, thus revealing part of the complex interconnection between the immune and neuro-endocrine systems in regulating food selection and consumption during the infectious process.
Neuroimmunomodulation | 2007
Gustavo Pacheco-López; Maj-Britt Niemi; Wei Kou; Sven Holger Baum; Marcus Hoffman; Pia Altenburger; Adriana del Rey; Hugo O. Besedovsky; Manfred Schedlowski
After saccharin intake is associated with the consequences of peripheral lipopolysaccharide (LPS) administration, rats develop a strong conditioned avoidance behavior against this gustatory stimulus. To investigate the role of central interleukin-1 (IL-1) as a key signal during taste-LPS engram formation, rats were chronically infused with IL-1 receptor antagonist into the lateral ventricle of the brain before, during and after a single association trial. The results indicate that a stable taste-LPS engram can be formed even under the chronic blockade of central IL-1 signaling during engram formation and consolidation. More importantly, our data show that animals which did not experience a fever response during association phase (due to the LPS encounter) were unable to elicit hyperthermia as part of the conditioned response. These data indicate that pairing a relevant taste stimulus with an immune challenge, such as LPS, might result in the formation of multiple engrams, specifically codifying independent information.
Physiology & Behavior | 2008
Gustavo Pacheco-López; Maj-Britt Niemi; Harald Engler; Andrea Engler; Carsten Riether; Raphael Doenlen; E. Espinosa; R. Oberbeck; Manfred Schedlowski
a Chair of Psychology and Behavioral Immunobiology, Institute for Behavioral Sciences, ETH Zurich, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland b Department of Physiology, Biophysics and Neuroscience, CINVESTAV, 07360 Mexico City, Mexico c Department of Medical Psychology, Medical Faculty, University of Duisburg-Essen, 45122 Essen, Germany d Department of Trauma Surgery, Medical Faculty, University of Duisburg-Essen, 45122 Essen, Germany
Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2006
Gustavo Pacheco-López; Harald Engler; Maj-Britt Niemi; Manfred Schedlowski