Leukocyte Profiles (leukocyte + profile)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


The use of leukocyte profiles to measure stress in vertebrates: a review for ecologists

FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, Issue 5 2008
A. K. Davis
Summary 1A growing number of ecologists are turning to the enumeration of white blood cells from blood smears (leukocyte profiles) to assess stress in animals. There has been some inconsistency and controversy in the ecological literature, however, regarding their interpretation. The inconsistencies may stem partly from a lack of information regarding how stress affects leukocytes in different taxa, and partly from a failure on the part of researchers in one discipline to consult potentially informative literature from another. 2Here, we seek to address both issues by reviewing the literature on the leukocyte response to stress, spanning the taxa of mammals (including humans), birds, amphibians, reptiles and fish. 3We show that much of the early literature points to a close link between leukocyte profiles and glucocorticoid levels. Specifically, these hormones act to increase the number and percentage of neutrophils (heterophils in birds and reptiles), while decreasing the number and percentage of lymphocytes. This phenomenon is seen in all five vertebrate taxa in response to either natural stressors or exogenous administration of stress hormones. For the ecologist, therefore, high ratios of heterophils or neutrophils to lymphocytes (,H : L' or ,N : L' ratios) in blood samples reliably indicate high glucocorticoid levels. Furthermore, this close relationship between stress hormones and N : L or H : L ratios needs to be highlighted more prominently in haematological assessments of stress, as it aids the interpretation of results. 4As with hormone assays, there are challenges to overcome in the use of leukocytes profiles to assess levels of stress; however, there are also advantages to this approach, and we outline each. Given the universal and consistent nature of the haematological response to stress, plus the overwhelming evidence from the veterinary, biomedical and ecological literature reviewed here, we conclude that this method can provide a reliable assessment of stress in all vertebrate taxa. [source]


Experimental addition of greenery reduces flea loads in nests of a non-greenery using species, the tree swallow Tachycineta bicolor

JOURNAL OF AVIAN BIOLOGY, Issue 1 2007
Dave Shutler
Several bird species, including cavity-nesters such as European starlings Sturnus vulgaris, add to their nests green sprigs of plants such as yarrow Achillea millefolium that are rich in volatile compounds. In this field study on another cavity-nester, tree swallows Tachycineta bicolor, we tested whether yarrow reduced ectoparasite loads (the nest protection hypothesis), stimulated nestling immune systems (the drug hypothesis), or had other consequences for nestling growth or parental reproductive success (predicted by both preceding hypotheses). Tree swallows do not naturally add greenery to their nests, and thus offer several advantages in testing for effects of greenery independent of other potentially confounding explanations for the behaviour. We placed fresh yarrow in 23 swallow nests on the day the first egg was laid, replenishing every two days until clutch completion (=three times), and at 44 control nests, nesting material was simply touched. At 12 days of age, we measured nestling body size and mass, and took blood smears to do differential white blood cell counts. We subsequently determined the number and proportion of young fledging from nests and the number of fleas remaining after fledging. Higher humidity was associated with higher flea numbers whereas number of feathers in the nest was not. Our most significant finding was that an average of 773 fleas Ceratophyllus idius was found in control nests, versus 419 in yarrow nests. Possibly, parents compensate for blood that nestlings lose to ectoparasites by increasing food delivery, because we detected no differences between treatments in nestling mass, nestling leukocyte profiles, or proportion of young fledging, or relative to flea numbers. Our results provide no support for the drug hypothesis and strong support for the nest protection hypothesis. [source]


The long-term effects of perinatal glucocorticoid exposure on the host defence system of the respiratory tract

THE JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY, Issue 1 2006
E Theogaraj
Abstract Glucocorticoids are used to mature the fetal lung at times of threatened premature delivery. These drugs modify leukocyte profiles when administered in adulthood, but their effects on the mature host defence system following administration during the perinatal period are incompletely understood. In this study, the long-term effects of perinatal dexamethasone exposure on rodent host defence cells in the pulmonary airspaces, the perivascular compartment of the lung, and the blood were investigated. Rats were treated prenatally (gestational days 16,19) or neonatally (postnatal days 1,7) by inclusion of dexamethasone in the mothers' drinking water (1 µg/ml). The pups were then allowed to develop to adulthood (P60-80), at which time respiratory tissues were collected for light and electron microscopy and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), and blood for cell count and fluorescent activated cell-sorting (FACS) analysis. Prenatal treatment had no effect on any parameter examined. Following neonatal dexamethasone exposure, light microscopy of the lung tissue revealed a significant reduction in the number of cells in the perivascular space in both the central and the peripheral regions of the adult lung, but no differences in the number of cells in the airspaces. Neonatal dexamethasone exposure was also characterized by a significant reduction in the total number of white cells in the peripheral blood in adulthood and in particular, the number of lymphocytes relative to neutrophils was significantly reduced at maturity in these animals. The results show that neonatal, but not prenatal, dexamethasone exposure significantly alters the distribution of host defence cells in the blood and lung at maturity compared with control animals. The early neonatal period is characterized by the stress hyporesponsive period in the rat, when endogenous glucocorticoid levels are very low. Therefore, exogenous glucocorticoids administered during this time are likely to have marked ,programming' effects on glucocorticoid-sensitive tissues. Copyright © 2006 Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


The use of leukocyte profiles to measure stress in vertebrates: a review for ecologists

FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, Issue 5 2008
A. K. Davis
Summary 1A growing number of ecologists are turning to the enumeration of white blood cells from blood smears (leukocyte profiles) to assess stress in animals. There has been some inconsistency and controversy in the ecological literature, however, regarding their interpretation. The inconsistencies may stem partly from a lack of information regarding how stress affects leukocytes in different taxa, and partly from a failure on the part of researchers in one discipline to consult potentially informative literature from another. 2Here, we seek to address both issues by reviewing the literature on the leukocyte response to stress, spanning the taxa of mammals (including humans), birds, amphibians, reptiles and fish. 3We show that much of the early literature points to a close link between leukocyte profiles and glucocorticoid levels. Specifically, these hormones act to increase the number and percentage of neutrophils (heterophils in birds and reptiles), while decreasing the number and percentage of lymphocytes. This phenomenon is seen in all five vertebrate taxa in response to either natural stressors or exogenous administration of stress hormones. For the ecologist, therefore, high ratios of heterophils or neutrophils to lymphocytes (,H : L' or ,N : L' ratios) in blood samples reliably indicate high glucocorticoid levels. Furthermore, this close relationship between stress hormones and N : L or H : L ratios needs to be highlighted more prominently in haematological assessments of stress, as it aids the interpretation of results. 4As with hormone assays, there are challenges to overcome in the use of leukocytes profiles to assess levels of stress; however, there are also advantages to this approach, and we outline each. Given the universal and consistent nature of the haematological response to stress, plus the overwhelming evidence from the veterinary, biomedical and ecological literature reviewed here, we conclude that this method can provide a reliable assessment of stress in all vertebrate taxa. [source]