Abstract

Easy-to-achieve interventions to promote healthy longevity are desired to diminish the incidence and severity of infections, as well as associated disability upon recovery. The dietary supplement palmitoylethanolamide (PEA) exerts anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective properties. Here, we investigated the effect of prophylactic PEA on the early immune response, clinical course, and survival of old mice after intracerebral E. coli K1 infection. Nineteen-month-old wild type mice were treated intraperitoneally with two doses of either 0.1 mg PEA/kg in 250 μl vehicle solution (n = 19) or with 250 μl vehicle solution only as controls (n = 19), 12 h and 30 min prior to intracerebral E. coli K1 infection. The intraperitoneal route was chosen to reduce distress in mice and to ensure exact dosing. Survival time, bacterial loads in cerebellum, blood, spleen, liver, and microglia counts and activation scores in the brain were evaluated. We measured the levels of IL-1β, IL-6, MIP-1α, and CXCL1 in cerebellum and spleen, as well as of bioactive lipids in serum in PEA- and vehicle-treated animals 24 h after infection. In the absence of antibiotic therapy, the median survival time of PEA-pre-treated infected mice was prolonged by 18 h compared to mice of the vehicle-pre-treated infected group (P = 0.031). PEA prophylaxis delayed the onset of clinical symptoms (P = 0.037). This protective effect was associated with lower bacterial loads in the spleen, liver, and blood compared to those of vehicle-injected animals (P ≤ 0.037). PEA-pre-treated animals showed diminished levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines in spleen 24 h after infection, as well as reduced serum concentrations of arachidonic acid and of one of its metabolites, 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid. In the brain, prophylactic PEA tended to reduce bacterial titers and attenuated microglial activation in aged infected animals (P = 0.042). Our findings suggest that prophylactic PEA can counteract infection associated detrimental responses in old animals. Accordingly, PEA treatment slowed the onset of infection symptoms and prolonged the survival of old infected mice. In a clinical setting, prophylactic administration of PEA might extend the potential therapeutic window where antibiotic therapy can be initiated to rescue elderly patients.

Highlights

  • Aging is a natural process accompanied by a progressive deterioration of physiological and cognitive functions [1]

  • Bacterial counts in the cerebellum tended to be PEA showed a trend toward lower chemokine levels compared to controls (P = 0.10, multivariate rank-sum test followed by Holm–Bonferroni correction, Figure 4D)

  • After the increased availability of vaccines to avert many cases of meningitis in children, priority was given to the development of preventive interventions in elderly persons, in whom the disease burden-associated fatality and disability rates remain dramatically high [4, 5]

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Summary

Introduction

Aging is a natural process accompanied by a progressive deterioration of physiological and cognitive functions [1]. The age-related decline of the immune function is responsible for reduced vaccine responses and increased incidence and severity of infections in elderly persons [2, 3]. Atypical clinical manifestations complicate the correct diagnosis of infections and delay the start of antibiotic therapy in the geriatric patient, contributing to an adverse outcome [4, 5]. The risk for complications arising from treatment delay may increase by up to 30% per hour [9]. To optimize the treatment efficiency, the German Society of Neurology recommends the initiation of antibiotic therapy within 1 h after admission and immediately after sampling of blood cultures and lumbar puncture (LP). New avenues to prevent the emergence of infections and to extend the therapeutic window for potential antibiotic therapy in the elderly population are required

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