Suppr超能文献

父母的饮食脂肪摄入会改变后代的微生物组和免疫系统。

Parental dietary fat intake alters offspring microbiome and immunity.

机构信息

Bacterial Pathogenesis Unit, Laboratory of Clinical Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892.

Epithelial Biology Section, National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892.

出版信息

J Immunol. 2013 Sep 15;191(6):3200-9. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.1301057. Epub 2013 Aug 9.

Abstract

Mechanisms underlying modern increases in prevalence of human inflammatory diseases remain unclear. The hygiene hypothesis postulates that decreased microbial exposure has, in part, driven this immune dysregulation. However, dietary fatty acids also influence immunity, partially through modulation of responses to microbes. Prior reports have described the direct effects of high-fat diets on the gut microbiome and inflammation, and some have additionally shown metabolic consequences for offspring. Our study sought to expand on these previous observations to identify the effects of parental diet on offspring immunity using mouse models to provide insights into challenging aspects of human health. To test the hypothesis that parental dietary fat consumption during gestation and lactation influences offspring immunity, we compared pups of mice fed either a Western diet (WD) fatty acid profile or a standard low-fat diet. All pups were weaned onto the control diet to specifically test the effects of early developmental fat exposure on immune development. Pups from WD breeders were not obese or diabetic, but still had worse outcomes in models of infection, autoimmunity, and allergic sensitization. They had heightened colonic inflammatory responses, with increased circulating bacterial LPS and muted systemic LPS responsiveness. These deleterious impacts of the WD were associated with alterations of the offspring gut microbiome. These results indicate that parental fat consumption can leave a "lard legacy" impacting offspring immunity and suggest inheritable microbiota may contribute to the modern patterns of human health and disease.

摘要

现代人类炎症性疾病发病率上升的机制尚不清楚。卫生假说认为,微生物暴露的减少部分导致了这种免疫失调。然而,饮食中的脂肪酸也会影响免疫,部分是通过调节对微生物的反应。先前的报告描述了高脂肪饮食对肠道微生物群和炎症的直接影响,一些报告还显示了对后代的代谢后果。我们的研究旨在扩展这些先前的观察结果,使用小鼠模型来确定父母饮食对后代免疫的影响,为人类健康的挑战性方面提供见解。为了验证父母在妊娠和哺乳期摄入脂肪会影响后代免疫的假设,我们比较了喂食西方饮食(WD)脂肪酸谱或标准低脂饮食的小鼠的幼崽。所有幼崽都被断奶到对照饮食上,以专门测试早期发育脂肪暴露对免疫发育的影响。WD 饲养者的幼崽没有肥胖或糖尿病,但在感染、自身免疫和过敏敏化模型中仍有更糟糕的结果。它们的结肠炎症反应加剧,循环中细菌 LPS 增加,全身 LPS 反应性降低。WD 的这些有害影响与后代肠道微生物组的改变有关。这些结果表明,父母的脂肪摄入会留下“脂肪遗产”,影响后代的免疫,并表明可遗传的微生物群可能导致现代人类健康和疾病模式。

相似文献

引用本文的文献

本文引用的文献

6
Compartmentalized control of skin immunity by resident commensals.常驻共生菌对皮肤免疫的分隔控制。
Science. 2012 Aug 31;337(6098):1115-9. doi: 10.1126/science.1225152. Epub 2012 Jul 26.

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验