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1 Departments of Psychology, Animals must balance their energy budget despite seasonal
changes in both energy availability and physiological expenditures. Immunity, in addition to growth, thermoregulation, and cellular maintenance, requires substantial energy to maintain function, although
few studies have directly tested the energetic cost of immunity. The
present study assessed the metabolic costs of an antibody response.
Adult and aged male C5BL/6J mice were implanted with either empty
Silastic capsules or capsules filled with melatonin and injected with
either saline or keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH). O2 consumption was monitored
periodically throughout antibody production using indirect calorimetry.
KLH-injected mice mounted significant immunoglobulin G (IgG) responses
and consumed more O2 compared with
animals injected with saline. Melatonin treatment increased
O2 consumption in mice injected
with saline but suppressed the increased metabolic rate associated with
an immune response in KLH-injected animals. Melatonin had no effect on
immune response to KLH. Adult and aged mice did not differ in antibody
response or metabolic activity. Aged mice appear unable to maintain
sufficient heat production despite comparable
O2 production to adult mice. These
results suggest that mounting an immune response requires significant
energy and therefore requires using resources that could otherwise be
allocated to other physiological processes. Energetic trade-offs are
likely when energy demands are high (e.g., during winter, pregnancy, or
lactation). Melatonin appears to play an adaptive role in coordinating
reproductive, immunologic, and energetic processes.
energetics; melatonin; thermoregulation; immunoglobulin
ANIMALS HAVE EVOLVED to maintain a balanced energy
budget (7, 34). Balancing an energy budget becomes challenging during winter when food supplies dwindle yet thermoregulatory demands increase. Nontropical animals have evolved specific adaptations to cope
with winter energy shortages. These adaptations serve to partition
available energy to bodily functions where it is most needed (e.g.,
thermoregulation, cellular processes) (33). Thus during winter most
available energy is partitioned into thermoregulation and not into
growth, reproduction, or other nonessential processes.
In addition to these well-known energetically demanding biological
processes, the immune system also requires energy to maintain its
function. Mounting an antibody response likely requires using resources
that could otherwise be allocated to other biological functions (1,
28). Thus immune function, like other biological processes, should be
"optimized" so that individuals can tolerate small infections if
the energetic costs of mounting an immune response outweigh the
benefits (3). Recent research on bighorn sheep has provided evidence
for an energetic trade-off between the costs of immune and reproductive
function (13). Lactation requires substantial energy. Lactating bighorn
ewes demonstrate increased parasitic infection in fecal samples
compared with nonlactating females (13). Increased parasitic infection
is likely due to reduced immune function in lactating ewes, but this
hypothesis remains to be tested directly. Thus optimal resource
allocation between reproductive and immune function depends on
competing energetic demands and their associated costs and benefits
(28). Similar trade-offs presumably exist between immune function and other energetically demanding biological functions (e.g.,
thermoregulation and reproduction) (1, 10, 28).
Although energy availability can affect immune responses (e.g., Ref.
16), few studies have directly assessed the metabolic cost of mounting
an antibody response. Presumably, the initiation of an immune response
(i.e., inflammation, activation of cytokines, induction of fever)
requires substantial energy, but this proposition has only been tested
indirectly. For example, European kestrels (Falco
tinnunculus) infected with the blood
protozoan Trypanosoma increase their
daily energy expenditure relative to uninfected birds (1). Chickens
injected with sheep red blood cells (SRBC) consume more food but gain
less weight than control chickens injected with saline (16). The
increase in energy intake likely reflects increased energetic demands
necessary for mounting an anti-SRBC antibody response. Depending on the
species, every 1°C increase in body temperature requires a
7-13% increase in caloric energy production (18). The goal of the
present experiment was to quantify the energetic costs of an immune
response. The effects of aging on both metabolic activity and immune
function were also assessed in the present study.
The aging process is associated with a progressive decline in a wide
range of physiological and biochemical functions including both
metabolic energy expenditure and immune function (26). The pineal
hormone melatonin, secreted in a rhythmic pattern with elevated plasma
levels occurring at night and basal levels during the day, has been
implicated in the aging process (2, 23). For example, the nocturnal
peak in plasma melatonin decreases dramatically with age (i.e.,
40-60%) in rodents (29). The age-related decline in melatonin
secretion may alter hypothalamic sensitivity to internal regulatory
mechanisms (e.g., homeostatic processes), leading to internal
desynchronization and thus accelerating the aging process (23).
Consistent with this hypothesis, although controversial (e.g., Ref.
31), exogenous melatonin treatment reinstates internal synchrony in
aged animals (2) and has been reported to prolong life span in
experimental animals (22). Melatonin also affects immune function (16,
24). Melatonin generally enhances immune function; exogenous melatonin
treatment enhances both humoral and cell-mediated immunity (reviewed in Refs. 15, 19). Thus age-related reductions in immune function may be
correlated with changes in the pattern or amount of melatonin secretion
(e.g., Ref. 23). In the present study, the energetic costs of an immune
response as well as the effects of melatonin on both immune function
and metabolic activity were assessed in both adult and aged mice. It
was anticipated that mice immunized with keyhole limpet hemocyanin
(KLH) would expend more O2 than saline-treated control mice. If melatonin enhances immune function, then melatonin-treated animals should demonstrate higher immunoglobulin G (IgG) responses compared with control animals. Also, it was predicted
that aged mice would display weaker immune responses compared with
adult mice.
Animals. Eighty adult (10-12 mo
of age) and 80 aged (22-24 mo of age) C57BL/6J mice were obtained
from the animal colony maintained at the Gerontology Research Center.
All animals were group housed (4/cage) in polypropylene cages (27.8 × 7.5 × 13.0 cm) with 2-3 cm of wood shavings for
bedding. The colony room was maintained with a 12:12-h light-dark cycle
[lights on 0600 Eastern Standard Time (EST)]. Temperature
was kept constant at 22.5 ± 1°C. Food (NIH-07 formula, 24%
protein, 4.2 kcal/g, in stainless steel hoppers) and tap water (from an
automated filtering system) were available ad libitum throughout the
experiment. The colony room was free from mouse viral infection
throughout the experiment.
Experimental
methods. Both adult and aged animals
were divided into two experimental groups. The first group was
implanted with a 15-mm-long Silastic capsule (1.47 mm ID, 1.95 mm OD,
Silicone Medical Grade Tubing, American Scientific Product, McGraw
Park, IL) filled 10 mm with melatonin crystals (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) and sealed with 2.5 mm of Silastic adhesive on each end. The amount of
melatonin released from these capsules is relatively constant; about 5 µg of melatonin is released per day (38). A control group was
implanted with 15-mm empty Silastic capsules. Surgery was performed
under light anesthesia with methoxyflurane vapors (Metofane, Pitman-Moore, Mundelein, IL). A 70% alcohol solution was applied to
the intrascapular surface, and a 5-mm incision was made perpendicular to midline. Capsules were implanted and the incision was closed with a
9-mm autoclip (Clay Adams, Parsippany, NJ). Nitrofurazone antibacterial
ointment (Phoenix Pharmaceutical, St. Joseph, MI) was applied to the
skin surface to prevent infection. Animals were then returned to the
colony rooms for a 1-wk recovery period.
Eight adult mice (4 melatonin treated and 4 control) and eight aged
mice (4 melatonin treated and 4 control) were randomly selected from
the experimental groups. The mice were weighed and colonic temperature
was measured by a prelubricated thermoprobe (Physitemp IT-14) inserted
2.0-2.5 cm into the rectum. Then animals were removed from the
restraint tubes and placed directly into individual metabolic chambers
(Oxymax Fast Response Chamber, 16 cm long, 5 cm ID) that were air-tight
with the exception of two air valves. Fresh air was pumped into the
chamber at a flow rate of ~1,600 ml/min and the outgoing air was sent
to O2 and
CO2 sensors (Oxymax System,
Columbus Instruments, Columbus OH). Once every 4 min,
O2 consumption and
CO2 production were measured, and
the output was sent to a computer. Only
O2 consumption data are reported in this paper. Metabolic activity was measured for 90 min (at 1000 EST)
at room temperature (22.5°C) for 3 consecutive days. This provided
a baseline assessment of metabolic function.
After initial baseline assessment, melatonin-treated and control
animals were further divided into two groups. Experimental animals
received a single subcutaneous injection of 150 µg of the novel
antigen KLH suspended in 0.1 ml sterile saline while control animals
received injections of the saline vehicle alone. KLH is an innocuous
respiratory protein derived from the giant keyhole limpet
(Meagthura
crenulata). KLH was used because it generates a robust antigenic response in rodents, but does not cause
any adverse reactions (e.g., inflammation or fever) and does not make
the animals ill (12). At 5, 10, and 15 days postimmunization, six
animals from each group were randomly selected to have their metabolic
activity monitored. Different animals were used for each of the three
time points (e.g., 5, 10, and 15 days post-KLH injection). These days
were chosen to capture peak immunoglobulin production during the course
of the immune response (12). Body mass and colonic temperature were
determined and their metabolic activity was monitored for 90 min using
the Oxymax system as described above. Animals were given light
anesthesia and a blood sample (500 µl) was obtained from the
retroorbital sinus. Samples were allowed to clot for 1 h, the clot was
removed, and samples were centrifuged (at 8°C) for 1 h at 2,500 revolutions/min. Serum aliquots were extracted and stored in
polypropylene microcentrifuge tubes at Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for
IgG. Serum concentrations of anti-KLH IgG were
determined using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Microtiter
plates were coated with antigen by overnight incubation at 4°C with
0.5 mg/ml KLH in sodium bicarbonate buffer, washed with
phosphate-buffered saline containing 0.05% Tween 20 (PBS-T), blocked
with 0.5% nonfat dry milk in PBS-T overnight at 4°C, and washed
again with PBS-T. Thawed serum samples from mice were diluted 1:100,
1:200, 1:400, and 1:800 with PBS-T, and 150 µl of each serum dilution
was added in duplicate to the wells of the antigen-coated plates.
Positive control samples (pooled serum from mice previously determined
to have high levels of anti-KLH antibodies, similarly diluted with
PBS-T) and negative control samples (pooled serum from mice never
immunized with KLH) were also added in duplicate to each plate. The
plates were sealed, incubated at 37°C for 3 h, and then washed with
PBS-T. Secondary antibody (alkaline phosphatase-conjugated anti-mouse
IgG diluted 1:2,000; Cappel, Durham, NC) was added to the wells, and
plates were sealed and incubated at 37°C for 1 h. Plates were again
washed with PBS-T and 150 µl of the enzyme substrate
p-nitrophenyl phosphate (1 mg/ml in
diethanolamine substrate buffer; Sigma Chemical) was added to each
well. Plates were protected from light during the enzyme substrate
reaction, which was terminated after 15 min by adding 50 µl of 1.5 M
NaOH to each well. The optical density (OD) of each well was determined
using a plate reader equipped with a 405-nm wavelength filter (Bio-Rad
model 3550), and the average OD for each set of duplicate wells was
calculated. To minimize intra- and interassay variability, the average
OD for each sample was expressed as a percentage of its plate-positive
control OD for statistical analyses.
Statistical
analyses. Each experimental variable
was analyzed using a two (age) × two (capsule) × two
(injection) × three (day) between-subjects analyses of variance
(ANOVA). Any pairwise comparisons of mean differences were conducted
using planned comparisons. Differences between groups were considered
statistically significant at P < 0.05. Due to a high rate of mortality in aged animals, there were
insufficient animals to analyze day
15 data for this group.
IgG response. Mice immunized with KLH
had increased anti-KLH IgG levels across days postimmunization
(F2,54 = 41.99;
P < 0.05) (Fig.
1). Animals treated with exogenous
melatonin capsules did not differ from control mice receiving empty
capsules in IgG levels (P > 0.05). Both adult and aged mice exhibited comparable levels of
anti-KLH IgG (P > 0.05) (Fig. 1).
![]()
ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
80°C until assayed.
After blood sampling, all animals were killed by cervical dislocation.
Paired testes, spleens, and brown adipose tissue (BAT) were removed,
cleaned of connective tissue, and weighed.
![]()
RESULTS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

View larger version (21K):
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Fig. 1.
Mean (±SE) serum anti-keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) levels in
adult (A) and aged
(B) mice treated with melatonin or
control mice from samples taken 5, 10, or 15 days postimmunization.
Data are presented as percent plate positive, in which the mean of each
sample was divided by the positive control run on the same microtiter
plate.
Tissue mass and body temperature. There were no significant differences in body mass between animals in any experimental group (P > 0.05) (Fig. 2). Adult mice had significantly larger paired testes mass (F1,124 = 97.94; P < 0.05) and BAT (F1,124 = 51.99; P < 0.05) (Table 1) but smaller splenic masses (F1,124 = 3.88; P < 0.05) compared with aged mice (Table 1). There were no differences in any tissue masses within either the adult or aged groups of animals (P > 0.05 in all cases).
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Colonic temperature did not differ between adult and aged mice (P > 0.05) (Fig. 3). Mice injected with KLH had significantly higher colonic temperatures postimmunization compared with saline-injected mice (F1,124 = 6.20; P < 0.05). Post hoc analysis revealed that this effect was due to significantly higher colonic temperatures in adult animals injected with KLH compared with saline-injected mice on day 10 (Fig. 3). There were no other significant pairwise comparisons within adult animals. Colonic temperature did not differ in aged animals in any experimental group (P > 0.05 in all cases) (Fig. 3).
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Oxygen consumption. Mice injected with KLH displayed higher O2 consumption than mice injected with saline (F1,124 = 8.37; P < 0.05) (Fig. 4). Adult and aged mice did not differ in O2 consumption on any of the test days (e.g., days 5, 10, and 15 postimmunization) (P > 0.05 in all cases). Melatonin-treated animals had higher O2 consumption than mice receiving empty Silastic capsules (F1,124 = 6.69; P < 0.05). There was a significant interaction between type of capsule and injection (F1,124 = 3.62; P < 0.05). Adult mice receiving empty Silastic capsules and injected with KLH had higher O2 consumption on both day 10 and day 15 postimmunization compared with control mice injected with saline (P < 0.05 in both cases). Adult KLH- and saline-injected mice did not differ in O2 consumption on day 5 (P > 0.05) (Fig. 4). Adult mice implanted with Silastic capsules containing melatonin and injected with KLH showed no differences in O2 consumption compared with saline-injected mice on any of the three test days (P > 0.05 in all cases). Aged mice receiving empty Silastic capsules and injected with KLH displayed higher O2 consumption on day 10 postinjection (P < 0.05). Aged KLH- and saline-injected mice did not differ in O2 consumption on day 5 postinjection (P > 0.05). Aged mice implanted with Silastic capsules containing melatonin and injected with KLH displayed no differences in O2 consumption compared with saline-injected mice on any of the three test days (P > 0.05 in all cases) (Fig. 4).
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DISCUSSION |
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The primary finding of this study is that adult and aged mice immunized with KLH expended significantly more O2 than control mice injected with saline. Both adult and aged animals injected with KLH generated equally robust antibody responses and displayed significant increases in energy expenditure. Furthermore, melatonin treatment did not have significant effects on the generation of an antibody response, but did alter the metabolic response to the antigen. This was true in both adult and aged mice. These results suggest that mounting an immune response is energetically costly and that melatonin may mediate this energetic response. However, these results are contrary to previous suggestions that melatonin facilitates immune responses in mice.
Adult mice had higher colonic temperatures on day 10 compared with day 5 and day 15 postimmunization; aged mice had no comparable increase in colonic temperatures. This result indicates that despite a significant increase in O2 consumption and therefore increased metabolic heat production, aged mice may not be able to raise body temperatures; failure to increase body temperature is likely due to increased heat loss in aged animals (e.g., Ref. 30). Taken together, these results demonstrate that mounting an immune response likely requires a significant energetic investment. KLH was chosen as an antigenic stimulus because it generates a quantifiable antibody response without making the animals ill. However, KLH is a relatively mild antigen that causes limited activation of the immune system (11); it is likely that the energetic costs assessed in the present study would be greatly increased with the use of more ecologically relevant antigenic challenges (i.e., bacteria, parasites). Analogously, adult and aged mice respond similarly to moderate cold stress, but aged animals do not cope as well as younger animals with severe cold stress (36).
Nevertheless, melatonin-treated mice expended more energy (e.g., increased O2 consumption) compared with untreated control mice. However, melatonin-treated animals injected with KLH failed to display increased O2 consumption relative to melatonin-treated control mice injected with saline. Thus melatonin appears to suppress the metabolic, but not the immune, response to KLH in mice. In aged mice, melatonin reduced BAT depots; immunization with KLH in aged mice increases BAT mass to premelatonin treatment levels. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that melatonin plays a role in coordinating reproductive, immunologic, and energetic processes rather than enhancing immune function directly (1, 8, 20, 28).
Mounting an immune response requires using resources that could otherwise be allocated to other physiological processes (e.g., thermoregulation, reproduction, immune function) (28). Melatonin may improve the efficiency of metabolic fuel use in response to an antigenic challenge, reducing the energetic cost associated with mounting an immune response. For example, exogenous melatonin improves thermogenic function in deer mice (4). Maintaining deer mice on short day lengths (which prolongs the duration of nightly melatonin secretion) also buffers against 2-deoxy-D-glucose-induced metabolic stress and increases immune function (8). Presumably, short-day animals experience improved metabolic function as a result of increased melatonin secretion.
Despite previous research demonstrating increased immune function in mice treated with melatonin (9, 15), melatonin had no effect on antibody production in the present study. Also, previous research has demonstrated that inbred strains of mice (including C57BL/6) have a genetic defect and are unable to synthesize melatonin (12, 14). Mice are ideal for immune studies, and it was necessary to establish that metabolic rate increased in response to antigen stimulation in a traditional animal model. Mice, like humans, are opportunistic and omnivorous and both species are commensal worldwide. However, because house mice are generally unresponsive to melatonin (32), they are not typically used as animal models for studies of seasonality. For example, administration of melatonin via subcutaneous Silastic capsules fails to reduce testicular mass in male mice; melatonin-sensitive species [i.e., golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) and grasshopper mice (Onychomys leucogaster)] undergo significant testicular regression (32). Melatonin-responsive deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus) treated with exogenous melatonin undergo reproductive regression and display enhanced immune function relative to untreated mice (9); deer mice that fail to respond to melatonin (i.e., melatonin insensitive) do not undergo reproductive regression and do not display enhanced immune function when given exogenous melatonin treatment (9). Thus reproductive responsiveness to melatonin may be required for the immunoenhancing effects of this indoleamine. The use of a melatonin-responsive species (e.g., deer mice, prairie voles, Siberian hamsters) will provide a better model than house mice for studying the effects of melatonin on immune function.
The notion that immune function is optimized based on available energy and competing energetic requirements is consistent with our results that suggest that immune function should be reduced when energy demands are high (i.e., Ref. 10). On the basis of our results, immune function should be generally compromised during winter, pregnancy, or lactation, particularly if energy availability is low. For example, O2 consumption during thermoregulation in small mammals increases ~30% for every 10°C reduction in ambient temperature (17) while the daily energetic cost of lactation is ~40% at peak levels (35). Our results also suggest that melatonin might maintain immune function during the energetic bottleneck associated with high winter thermogenic needs when food availability is often scarce. This hypothesis requires additional direct tests in the future with appropriate animal models of seasonal breeding. The adaptive functional perspective that immune function is optimized may also require a reassessment of the role of energetic "stress" on immune function; labeling a response such as immunocompromise when energy is low as a "stress response" likely obscures the energy-savings adaptive function of reduced immunity (see Ref. 27).
Aged mice had smaller testes and significant reductions in BAT mass. However, aged animals did not differ in total body mass compared with adult mice; thus specific tissue differences are not likely due to overall changes in body mass. These results confirm and extend previous findings of reductions in reproductive behavior, physiology, and morphology in aged house mice (6). Taken together, the present findings suggest that mounting an immune response requires significant energy. Both adult and aged mice demonstrate increased metabolic response to KLH. However, aged animals are unable to generate sufficient heat in response to an antigenic challenge compared with adult mice. Melatonin reduces metabolic rate, but not immune response to KLH. Thus melatonin appears to plays a role in coordinating reproductive, immunologic, and energetic processes rather than enhancing immune function directly when antigenic stimulation is mild.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank Sue Yang and Violette Renard for technical support. We also thank Lance Kriegsfeld and Sabra Klein for valuable comments on the manuscript.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This study was supported by National Institute of Mental Health Grant MH-57535 (formerly HD-22201) and National Science Foundation Grant IBN 9713420.
Address for reprint requests: G. E. Demas, Dept. of Psychology, Behavioral Neuroendocrinology Group, The Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, MD 21218-2686.
Received 27 February 1997; accepted in final form 28 July 1997.
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