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Benzodiazepine Augmented &ggr;-Amino-Butyric Acid Signaling Increases Mortality From Pneumonia in Mice*

Abstract

Objectives

Benzodiazepines are used for treating anxiety, epilepsy, muscle spasm, alcohol withdrawal, palliation, insomnia, and sedation as they allosterically modulate γ-amino-butyric acid type A (GABAA) receptors. Despite widespread use, the importance and mechanism of their immune side-effects are poorly understood. Herein we sought to elucidate the impact and mechanism of benzodiazepine-induced susceptibility to infection at anxiolytic doses in mice.

Design

Animal randomized controlled trial.

Setting

Laboratory.

Subjects

Adult female C57BL/6 and BALB/c mice.

Interventions

The effect of a subsedative, anxiolytic dose of diazepam (2 mg kg intraperitoneal) was investigated in a murine Streptococcus pneumoniae pneumonia model.

Measurement and main results

Mortality, bacterial and cytokine load, cell recruitment, and intracellular pH were measured. Diazepam treatment did not affect immune homeostasis in the lung. However, diazepam increased mortality and bacterial load from S. pneumoniae pneumonia. The increases in mortality and bacterial load were reversed by a GABAA antagonist, bicuculline, indicating dependence on GABAA receptor signaling. While cell recruitment was unaltered by diazepam, the cytokine response to infection was affected, suggesting that local responses to the pathogen were perturbed. Macrophage and monocytes expressed benzodiazepine sensitive (α1-γ2) GABAA receptors. Interestingly macrophage GABAA receptor expression was regulated by bacterial toll-like receptor agonists and cytokines indicating an endogenous role in the immune response. Functionally diazepam appeared to counteract the endogenous down-regulation of GABAA signaling during infection. Consistent with augmented GABAA signaling, diazepam provoked intracellular acidosis in macrophage, leading to impaired cytokine production, bacterial phagocytosis and killing. In contrast, selective benzodiazepines that do not target the α1 GABAA subunit did not affect macrophage function ex vivo or increase susceptibility to pneumonia in vivo.

Conclusions

Our data highlight the regulation of macrophage function by GABAA receptor signaling and the potential harm of benzodiazepine exposure during pneumonia. Therapeutically, selective drugs may improve the safety profile of benzodiazepines.

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