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Immune molecules may affect mood

Anne Trafton

created: June 24, 2025, 9 p.m. | updated: June 25, 2025, 9:37 a.m.

“If you’re sick, there’s so many more things that are happening to your internal states, your mood, and your behavioral states, and that’s not simply you being fatigued physically. In the cortex, the researchers found certain receptors in a population of neurons that, when overactivated, can lead to autism-like symptoms such as reduced sociability in mice. Choi hypothesizes that IL-17 may have evolved as a neuromodulator and was “hijacked” by the immune system only later. Meanwhile, the researchers also found two types of IL-17 receptors in a certain population of neurons in the amygdala, which plays an important role in processing emotions. When these receptors bind to two forms of IL-17, the neurons become more excitable, leading to an increase in anxiety.

2 days, 3 hours ago: MIT Technology Review