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Experimental Biology and Medicine 232:420-426 (2007)
© 2007 Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine


ORIGINAL RESEARCH ARTICLE

Mechanisms Involved in the Anti-Inflammatory Action of Inhaled Tea Tree Oil in Mice

Mateusz Golab1 and Krystyna Skwarlo-Sonta

Department of Animal Physiology, Faculty of Biology, Warsaw University, Miecznikowa 1, 02–096 Warsaw, Poland

To whom requests for reprints should be addressed at 1 Department of Animal Physiology, Faculty of Biology, Warsaw University, Miecznikowa 1, 02–096 Warsaw, Poland. E-mail: golmat{at}biol.uw.edu.pl

Tea tree oil (TTO) is well known as an antimicrobial and immunomodulatory agent. In the present study we confirmed the anti-inflammatory properties of TTO and investigated the involvement of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis in the immunomodulatory action of TTO administered by inhalation. Sexually mature, 6–8-week-old, C57BI10 x CBA/H (F1) male mice were used. One group of animals was injected intra-peritoneally (ip) with Zymosan to elicit peritoneal inflammation and was then submitted to four sessions of TTO inhalation (15 mins each). Some of the mice were simultaneously injected ip with Antalarmin, a CRH-1 receptor antagonist, to block HPA axis functions. Twenty-four hours after the injections the mice were killed by CO2 asphyxia, and peritoneal leukocytes (PTLs) were isolated and counted. Levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and cyclooxygenase (COX) activity in PTLs were assessed by fluorimetric and colorimetric assays, respectively. The results obtained show that sessions of TTO inhalation exert a strong anti-inflammatory influence on the immune system stimulated by Zymosan injection, while having no influence on PTL number, ROS level, and COX activity in mice without inflammation. The HPA axis was shown to mediate the anti-inflammatory effect of TTO; Antalarmin abolished the influence of inhaled TTO on PTL number and their ROS production in mice with experimental peritonitis, but it had no effect on these parameters in mice without inflammation.

Key Words: tea tree oil • inflammation • HPA • COX • immunomodulation







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