Center for Human Nutrition, Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Adv Nutr. 2011 Sep;2(5):377-95. doi: 10.3945/an.111.000570. Epub 2011 Sep 6.
A growing body of evidence highlights the importance of a mother's nutrition from preconception through lactation in programming the emerging organ systems and homeostatic pathways of her offspring. The developing immune system may be particularly vulnerable. Indeed, examples of nutrition-mediated immune programming can be found in the literature on intra-uterine growth retardation, maternal micronutrient deficiencies, and infant feeding. Current models of immune ontogeny depict a "layered" expansion of increasingly complex defenses, which may be permanently altered by maternal malnutrition. One programming mechanism involves activation of the maternal hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in response to nutritional stress. Fetal or neonatal exposure to elevated stress hormones is linked in animal studies to permanent changes in neuroendocrine-immune interactions, with diverse manifestations such as an attenuated inflammatory response or reduced resistance to tumor colonization. Maternal malnutrition may also have a direct influence, as evidenced by nutrient-driven epigenetic changes to developing T regulatory cells and subsequent risk of allergy or asthma. A 3rd programming pathway involves placental or breast milk transfer of maternal immune factors with immunomodulatory functions (e.g. cytokines). Maternal malnutrition can directly affect transfer mechanisms or influence the quality or quantity of transferred factors. The public health implications of nutrition-mediated immune programming are of particular importance in the developing world, where prevalent maternal undernutrition is coupled with persistent infectious challenges. However, early alterations to the immune system, resulting from either nutritional deficiencies or excesses, have broad relevance for immune-mediated diseases, such as asthma, and chronic inflammatory conditions like cardiovascular disease.
越来越多的证据强调了母亲从受孕前到哺乳期的营养对其后代新兴器官系统和体内平衡途径的编程的重要性。正在发育的免疫系统可能特别脆弱。事实上,营养介导的免疫编程的例子可以在关于宫内发育迟缓、母体微量营养素缺乏和婴儿喂养的文献中找到。目前的免疫发生模型描述了一个“分层”扩展的越来越复杂的防御系统,这个系统可能会被母体营养不良永久改变。一个编程机制涉及到母体下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺轴对营养压力的激活。动物研究表明,胎儿或新生儿暴露于升高的应激激素与神经内分泌-免疫相互作用的永久性变化有关,表现为炎症反应减弱或对肿瘤定植的抵抗力降低等多种表现。母体营养不良也可能有直接影响,这可以从营养驱动的发育中的 T 调节细胞的表观遗传变化以及随后的过敏或哮喘风险中得到证明。第三个编程途径涉及胎盘或母乳中转运具有免疫调节功能的母体免疫因子(例如细胞因子)。母体营养不良会直接影响转移机制或影响转移因子的质量或数量。营养介导的免疫编程对发展中国家的公共卫生具有特别重要的意义,因为那里普遍存在的母体营养不足与持续存在的感染挑战并存。然而,由于营养缺乏或过量而导致的免疫系统早期改变,对哮喘等免疫介导的疾病和心血管疾病等慢性炎症性疾病具有广泛的相关性。