Mbow Moustapha, de Jong Sanne E, Meurs Lynn, Mboup Souleymane, Dieye Tandakha Ndiaye, Polman Katja, Yazdanbakhsh Maria
Immunology Department of the Laboratory of Bacteriology and Virology of Aristide Le Dantec University Hospital, Dakar, Senegal; Leiden Immunoparasitology Group, Department of Parasitology, Leiden University Medical Centre, Leiden, the Netherlands; Department of Biomedical Sciences of the Institute of Tropical Medicine of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium.
Immunology. 2014 Dec;143(4):569-77. doi: 10.1111/imm.12335.
Differences in lifestyle and break with natural environment appear to be associated with changes in the immune system resulting in various adverse health effects. Although genetics can have a major impact on the immune system and disease susceptibility, the contribution of environmental factors is thought to be substantial. Here, we investigated the immunological profile of healthy volunteers living in a rural and an urban area of a developing African country (Senegal), and in a European country (the Netherlands). Using flow cytometry, we investigated T helper type 1 (Th1), Th2, Th17, Th22 and regulatory T cells, as well as CD4(+) T-cell and B-cell activation markers, and subsets of memory T and B cells in the peripheral blood. Rural Senegalese had significantly higher frequencies of Th1, Th2 and Th22 cells, memory CD4(+) T and B cells, as well as activated CD4(+) T and B cells compared with urban Senegalese and urban Dutch people. Within the Senegalese population, rural paritcipants displayed significantly higher frequencies of Th2 and Th22 cells, as well as higher pro-inflammatory and T-cell activation and memory profiles compared with the urban population. The greater magnitude of immune activation and the enlarged memory pool, together with Th2 polarization, seen in rural participants from Africa, followed by urban Africans and Europeans suggest that environmental changes may define immunological footprints, which could have consequences for disease patterns in general and vaccine responses in particular.
生活方式的差异以及与自然环境的脱节似乎与免疫系统的变化相关,从而导致各种不良健康影响。尽管基因对免疫系统和疾病易感性可能有重大影响,但环境因素的作用被认为是相当大的。在此,我们调查了生活在一个非洲发展中国家(塞内加尔)的农村和城市地区以及一个欧洲国家(荷兰)的健康志愿者的免疫特征。我们使用流式细胞术研究了外周血中的1型辅助性T细胞(Th1)、2型辅助性T细胞(Th2)、17型辅助性T细胞(Th17)、22型辅助性T细胞(Th22)和调节性T细胞,以及CD4(+) T细胞和B细胞激活标志物,还有记忆T细胞和B细胞亚群。与城市塞内加尔人和城市荷兰人相比,农村塞内加尔人的Th1、Th2和Th22细胞、记忆CD4(+) T细胞和B细胞以及活化的CD4(+) T细胞和B细胞的频率显著更高。在塞内加尔人群中,与城市人群相比,农村参与者的Th2和Th22细胞频率显著更高,并且具有更高的促炎和T细胞激活及记忆特征。在来自非洲农村的参与者中观察到的更大程度的免疫激活、扩大的记忆库以及Th2极化,其次是城市非洲人和欧洲人,这表明环境变化可能会定义免疫印记,这可能总体上对疾病模式尤其是疫苗反应产生影响。