Impaired immune function in Gulf War Illness.
Whistler T, Fletcher MA, Lonergan W, Zeng XR, Lin JM, Laperriere A,
Vernon SD, Klimas NG.
Chronic Viral Diseases Branch, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention,
Atlanta, GA, USA. [email protected].
ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Gulf War Illness (GWI) remains a serious health
consequence for at least 11,000 veterans of the first Gulf War in the
early 1990s. Our understanding of the health consequences that resulted
remains inadequate, and this is of great concern with another deployment
to the same theater of operations occurring now. Chronic immune cell
dysfunction and activation have been demonstrated in patients with GWI,
although the literature is not uniform. We exposed GWI patients and
matched controls to an exercise challenge to explore differences in
immune cell function measured by classic immune assays and gene expression
profiling. METHODS: This pilot study enrolled 9 GWI cases identified
from the Department of Veterans Affairs GWI registry, and 11 sedentary
control veterans who had not been deployed to the Persian Gulf and were
matched to cases by sex, body mass index (BMI) and age. We measured
peripheral blood cell numbers, NK cytotoxicity, cytokines and expression
levels of 20,000 genes immediately before, immediately after and 4 hours
following a standard bicycle ergometer exercise challenge. RESULTS:
A repeated-measures analysis of variance revealed statistically significant
differences for three NK cell subsets and NK cytotoxicity between cases
and controls (p < 0.05). Linear regression analysis correlating NK
cell numbers to the gene expression profiles showed high correlation
of genes associated with NK cell function, serving as a biologic validation
of both the in vitro assays and the microarray platform. Intracellular
perforin levels in NK and CD8 T-cells trended lower and showed a flatter
profile in GWI cases than controls, as did the expression levels of
the perforin gene PRF1. Genes distinguishing cases from controls were
associated with the glucocorticoid signaling pathway. CONCLUSION: GWI
patients demonstrated impaired immune function as demonstrated by decreased
NK cytotoxicity and altered gene expression associated with NK cell
function. Pro-inflammatory cytokines, T-cell ratios, and dysregulated
mediators of the stress response (including salivary cortisol) were
also altered in GWI cases compared to control subjects. An interesting
and potentially important observation was that the exercise challenge
augments these differences, with the most significant effects observed
immediately after the stressor, possibly implicating some block in the
NK and CD8 T-cells ability to respond to "stress-mediated activation".
This has positive implications for the development of laboratory diagnostic
tests for this syndrome and provides a paradigm for exploration of the
immuno-physiological mechanisms that are operating in GWI, and similar
complex syndromes. Our results do not necessarily elucidate the cause
of GWI, but they do reveal a role for immune cell dysfunction in sustaining
illness.
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