Leukocytosis and natural killer cell function parallel neurobehavioral fatigue induced by 64 hours of sleep deprivation.
Open Access
- 1 May 1994
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 93 (5) , 1930-1939
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci117184
Abstract
The hypothesis that sleep deprivation depresses immune function was tested in 20 adults, selected on the basis of their normal blood chemistry, monitored in a laboratory for 7 d, and kept awake for 64 h. At 2200 h each day measurements were taken of total leukocytes (WBC), monocytes, granulocytes, lymphocytes, eosinophils, erythrocytes (RBC), B and T lymphocyte subsets, activated T cells, and natural killer (NK) subpopulations (CD56/CD8 dual-positive cells, CD16-positive cells, CD57-positive cells). Functional tests included NK cytotoxicity, lymphocyte stimulation with mitogens, and DNA analysis of cell cycle. Sleep loss was associated with leukocytosis and increased NK cell activity. At the maximum sleep deprivation, increases were observed in counts of WBC, granulocytes, monocytes, NK activity, and the proportion of lymphocytes in the S phase of the cell cycle. Changes in monocyte counts correlated with changes in other immune parameters. Counts of CD4, CD16, CD56, and CD57 lymphocytes declined after one night without sleep, whereas CD56 and CD57 counts increased after two nights. No changes were observed in other lymphocyte counts, in proliferative responses to mitogens, or in plasma levels of cortisol or adrenocorticotropin hormone. The physiologic leukocytosis and NK activity increases during deprivation were eliminated by recovery sleep in a manner parallel to neurobehavioral function, suggesting that the immune alterations may be associated with biological pressure for sleep.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sleep as a host defense: Its regulation by microbial products and cytokinesClinical Immunology and Immunopathology, 1990
- Somnogenic activity of immune response modifiersTrends in Pharmacological Sciences, 1990
- Interleukin-1 β and muramyl dipeptide can prevent decreased antibody response associated with sleep deprivationBrain, Behavior, and Immunity, 1989
- Lymphocyte subpopulations in children with abnormal lymphatic circulationJournal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 1989
- Sleep Deprivation and the Effect on Exercise Performance1Sports Medicine, 1989
- Low natural killer cytotoxicity in major depressionLife Sciences, 1987
- Decreasing the spontaneous release in NK cell assaysJournal of Immunological Methods, 1987
- Comparison of a Simplified Whole Blood and Isolated Lymphocyte Stimulation TechniqueImmunological Communications, 1981
- Quantification of Sleepiness: A New ApproachPsychophysiology, 1973
- Effects of 24-hour sleep deprivation on rate of decrement in a 10-minute auditory reaction time task.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1972