Ross A Catharine
Department of Nutritional Sciences and Huck Institute for Life Sciences, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, USA.
Vitam Horm. 2007;75:197-222. doi: 10.1016/S0083-6729(06)75008-7.
Vitamin A (VA, retinol) is essential for normal immune system maturation, but the effect of VA(1) on antibody production, the hallmark of successful vaccination, is still not well understood. In countries where VA deficiency is a public health problem, many children worldwide are now receiving VA along with immunizations against poliovirus, measles, diphtheria, pertussis, and tetanus. The primary goal has been to provide enough VA to protect against the development of VA deficiency for a period of 4-6 months. However, it is also possible that VA might promote the vaccine antibody response. Several community studies, generally of small size, have been conducted in children supplemented with VA at the time of immunization, as promoted by the World Health Organization/UNICEF. However, only a few studies have reported differences in antibody titers or seroconversion rates due to VA. However, VA status was not directly assessed, and in some communities children were often breast fed, another strategy for preventing VA deficiency. Some of the vaccines used induced a high rate of seroconversion, even without VA. In children likely to have been VA deficient, oral polio vaccine seroconversion rate was increased by VA. In animal models, where VA status was controlled and VA deficiency confirmed, the antibody response to T-cell-dependent (TD) and polysaccharide antigens was significantly reduced, congruent with other defects in innate and adaptive immunity. Moreover, the active metabolite of VA, retinoic acid (RA) can potentiate antibody production to TD antigens in normal adult and neonatal animals. We speculate that numerous animal studies have correctly identified VA deficiency as a risk factor for low antibody production. A lack of effect of VA in human studies could be due to a low rate of VA deficiency in the populations studied or low sample numbers. The ability to detect differences in antibody response may also depend on the vaccine-adjuvant combination used. Future studies of VA supplementation and immunization should include assessment of VA status and a sufficiently large sample size. It would also be worthwhile to test the effect of neonatal VA supplementation on the response to immunization given after 6 months to 1 year of age, as VA supplementation, by preventing the onset of VA deficiency, may improve the response to immunizations given later on.
维生素A(VA,视黄醇)对正常免疫系统成熟至关重要,但VA(1)对抗体产生(成功接种疫苗的标志)的影响仍未得到充分理解。在VA缺乏成为公共卫生问题的国家,全球许多儿童现在在接种脊髓灰质炎病毒、麻疹、白喉、百日咳和破伤风疫苗时同时接受VA。主要目标是提供足够的VA以预防4至6个月期间VA缺乏的发生。然而,VA也有可能促进疫苗抗体反应。按照世界卫生组织/联合国儿童基金会的倡导,已在免疫时补充VA的儿童中开展了几项社区研究,这些研究规模通常较小。然而,仅有少数研究报告了VA导致的抗体滴度或血清转化率差异。然而,未直接评估VA状态,并且在一些社区中儿童常进行母乳喂养,这是预防VA缺乏的另一种策略。即使不使用VA,所使用的一些疫苗也诱导了高血清转化率。在可能存在VA缺乏的儿童中,口服脊髓灰质炎疫苗血清转化率因VA而提高。在动物模型中,VA状态得到控制且VA缺乏得到确认,对T细胞依赖性(TD)和多糖抗原的抗体反应显著降低,这与先天和适应性免疫中的其他缺陷一致。此外,VA的活性代谢物视黄酸(RA)可增强正常成年和新生动物对TD抗原的抗体产生。我们推测众多动物研究已正确将VA缺乏识别为低抗体产生的危险因素。VA在人体研究中缺乏效果可能是由于所研究人群中VA缺乏率低或样本数量少。检测抗体反应差异的能力也可能取决于所使用的疫苗 - 佐剂组合。未来关于VA补充和免疫的研究应包括VA状态评估和足够大的样本量。测试新生儿补充VA对6个月至1岁后接种疫苗反应的影响也将是值得的,因为补充VA通过预防VA缺乏的发生,可能改善随后接种疫苗的反应。