40 research outputs found
Is hematopoiesis under the influence of neural and neuroendocrine mechanisms?
It is well recognized that the immune
response is under the influence of a variety of neural or
neuroendocrine mechanisms. Much less studied is the
possible influence of these mechanisms on hematopoiesis.
Here I review the existing evidence about a
neural andlor neuroendocrine regulation of hematopoiesis.
The physiology of the blood forming system
seems to be controlled at three levels, i.e. at the cellular
level by the bone marrow stroma, at the humoral level
by hematopoietic cytokines and finally by catecholamines
and neuroendocrine factors. Bone marrow
catecholarnines originate from sympathetic nerve fibers
and from hematopoietic cells directly. Catecholamines of
neural origin show a circadian rhythmicity. Adrenoceptors
present on bone marrow cells include the a l -
subtype which seems to mediate the catecholaminergic
control of hematopoiesis. Neuroendocrine factors
including substance P, neurokinin-A and the pineal
hormone melatonin might also influence hematopoiesis
by affecting hernatopoietic cytokines. In particular,
melatonin seems to affect hematopoiesis via the
induction in bone marrow T-helper cells of two novel
opioid cytokines. A complete understanding of the
neural and neuroendocrine regulation of hematopoiesis
might provide new conceptual and therapeutic
perspectives in a variety of hematopoietic and immune
diseases