Sex differences in stress and immune responses during confinement in Antarctica

Abstract Background Antarctica challenges human explorers by its extreme environment. The effects of these unique conditions on the human physiology need to be understood to best mitigate health problems in Antarctic expedition crews. Moreover, Antarctica is an adequate Earth-bound analogue for long...

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Main Authors: C. Strewe, D. Moser, J.-I. Buchheim, H.-C. Gunga, A. Stahn, B. E. Crucian, B. Fiedel, H. Bauer, P. Gössmann-Lang, D. Thieme, E. Kohlberg, A. Choukèr, M. Feuerecker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-04-01
Series:Biology of Sex Differences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13293-019-0231-0
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author C. Strewe
D. Moser
J.-I. Buchheim
H.-C. Gunga
A. Stahn
B. E. Crucian
B. Fiedel
H. Bauer
P. Gössmann-Lang
D. Thieme
E. Kohlberg
A. Choukèr
M. Feuerecker
spellingShingle C. Strewe
D. Moser
J.-I. Buchheim
H.-C. Gunga
A. Stahn
B. E. Crucian
B. Fiedel
H. Bauer
P. Gössmann-Lang
D. Thieme
E. Kohlberg
A. Choukèr
M. Feuerecker
Sex differences in stress and immune responses during confinement in Antarctica
Biology of Sex Differences
Sex differences
Neuroendocrine response
Immunity
Extreme environment
Antarctica
Confinement
author_facet C. Strewe
D. Moser
J.-I. Buchheim
H.-C. Gunga
A. Stahn
B. E. Crucian
B. Fiedel
H. Bauer
P. Gössmann-Lang
D. Thieme
E. Kohlberg
A. Choukèr
M. Feuerecker
author_sort C. Strewe
title Sex differences in stress and immune responses during confinement in Antarctica
title_short Sex differences in stress and immune responses during confinement in Antarctica
title_full Sex differences in stress and immune responses during confinement in Antarctica
title_fullStr Sex differences in stress and immune responses during confinement in Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Sex differences in stress and immune responses during confinement in Antarctica
title_sort sex differences in stress and immune responses during confinement in antarctica
publisher BMC
series Biology of Sex Differences
issn 2042-6410
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Abstract Background Antarctica challenges human explorers by its extreme environment. The effects of these unique conditions on the human physiology need to be understood to best mitigate health problems in Antarctic expedition crews. Moreover, Antarctica is an adequate Earth-bound analogue for long-term space missions. To date, its effects on human physiology have been studied mainly in male cohorts though more female expeditioners and applicants in astronaut training programs are selected. Therefore, the identification of sex differences in stress and immune reactions are becoming an even more essential aim to provide a more individualized risk management. Methods Ten female and 16 male subjects participated in three 1-year expeditions to the German Antarctic Research Station Neumayer III. Blood, saliva, and urine samples were taken 1–2 months prior to departure, subsequently every month during their expedition, and 3–4 months after return from Antarctica. Analyses included cortisol, catecholamine and endocannabinoid measurements; psychological evaluation; differential blood count; and recall antigen- and mitogen-stimulated cytokine profiles. Results Cortisol showed significantly higher concentrations in females than males during winter whereas no enhanced psychological stress was detected in both sexes. Catecholamine excretion was higher in males than females but never showed significant increases compared to baseline. Endocannabinoids and N-acylethanolamides increased significantly in both sexes and stayed consistently elevated during the confinement. Cytokine profiles after in vitro stimulation revealed no sex differences but resulted in significant time-dependent changes. Hemoglobin and hematocrit were significantly higher in males than females, and hemoglobin increased significantly in both sexes compared to baseline. Platelet counts were significantly higher in females than males. Leukocytes and granulocyte concentrations increased during confinement with a dip for both sexes in winter whereas lymphocytes were significantly elevated in both sexes during the confinement. Conclusions The extreme environment of Antarctica seems to trigger some distinct stress and immune responses but—with the exception of cortisol and blood cell counts—without any major relevant sex-specific differences. Stated sex differences were shown to be independent of enhanced psychological stress and seem to be related to the environmental conditions. However, sources and consequences of these sex differences have to be further elucidated.
topic Sex differences
Neuroendocrine response
Immunity
Extreme environment
Antarctica
Confinement
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13293-019-0231-0
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spelling doaj-18112b880f6942c997eff20ac8bd262c2020-11-25T03:10:23ZengBMCBiology of Sex Differences2042-64102019-04-0110111710.1186/s13293-019-0231-0Sex differences in stress and immune responses during confinement in AntarcticaC. Strewe0D. Moser1J.-I. Buchheim2H.-C. Gunga3A. Stahn4B. E. Crucian5B. Fiedel6H. Bauer7P. Gössmann-Lang8D. Thieme9E. Kohlberg10A. Choukèr11M. Feuerecker12Department of Anaesthesiology, University Hospital, LMU Munich, Laboratory of Translational Research “Stress and Immunity”Department of Anaesthesiology, University Hospital, LMU Munich, Laboratory of Translational Research “Stress and Immunity”Department of Anaesthesiology, University Hospital, LMU Munich, Laboratory of Translational Research “Stress and Immunity”Institut für Physiologie, Charité Universitätsmedizin BerlinInstitut für Physiologie, Charité Universitätsmedizin BerlinNASA - Johnson Space CenterAlfred-Wegener-Institut, Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar- und MeeresforschungAlfred-Wegener-Institut, Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar- und MeeresforschungAlfred-Wegener-Institut, Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar- und MeeresforschungInstitute of Doping Analysis und Sports BiochemistryAlfred-Wegener-Institut, Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar- und MeeresforschungDepartment of Anaesthesiology, University Hospital, LMU Munich, Laboratory of Translational Research “Stress and Immunity”Department of Anaesthesiology, University Hospital, LMU Munich, Laboratory of Translational Research “Stress and Immunity”Abstract Background Antarctica challenges human explorers by its extreme environment. The effects of these unique conditions on the human physiology need to be understood to best mitigate health problems in Antarctic expedition crews. Moreover, Antarctica is an adequate Earth-bound analogue for long-term space missions. To date, its effects on human physiology have been studied mainly in male cohorts though more female expeditioners and applicants in astronaut training programs are selected. Therefore, the identification of sex differences in stress and immune reactions are becoming an even more essential aim to provide a more individualized risk management. Methods Ten female and 16 male subjects participated in three 1-year expeditions to the German Antarctic Research Station Neumayer III. Blood, saliva, and urine samples were taken 1–2 months prior to departure, subsequently every month during their expedition, and 3–4 months after return from Antarctica. Analyses included cortisol, catecholamine and endocannabinoid measurements; psychological evaluation; differential blood count; and recall antigen- and mitogen-stimulated cytokine profiles. Results Cortisol showed significantly higher concentrations in females than males during winter whereas no enhanced psychological stress was detected in both sexes. Catecholamine excretion was higher in males than females but never showed significant increases compared to baseline. Endocannabinoids and N-acylethanolamides increased significantly in both sexes and stayed consistently elevated during the confinement. Cytokine profiles after in vitro stimulation revealed no sex differences but resulted in significant time-dependent changes. Hemoglobin and hematocrit were significantly higher in males than females, and hemoglobin increased significantly in both sexes compared to baseline. Platelet counts were significantly higher in females than males. Leukocytes and granulocyte concentrations increased during confinement with a dip for both sexes in winter whereas lymphocytes were significantly elevated in both sexes during the confinement. Conclusions The extreme environment of Antarctica seems to trigger some distinct stress and immune responses but—with the exception of cortisol and blood cell counts—without any major relevant sex-specific differences. Stated sex differences were shown to be independent of enhanced psychological stress and seem to be related to the environmental conditions. However, sources and consequences of these sex differences have to be further elucidated.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13293-019-0231-0Sex differencesNeuroendocrine responseImmunityExtreme environmentAntarcticaConfinement