Merlo Julieta Leticia, Cutrera Ana Paula, Zenuto Roxana Rita
Laboratorio de Ecología Fisiológica y del Comportamiento, Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras, CONICET-Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
J Exp Zool A Ecol Genet Physiol. 2016 Dec;325(10):675-687. doi: 10.1002/jez.2060. Epub 2017 Feb 5.
Insufficient or unbalanced food intake typically has a negative impact on immune responses. The understanding of this effect is, however, hampered by the effect that food has on general condition, which, in turn, affects immunity, and the interaction among general condition, immunocompetence, and concurrent infections. The goal of this study was to determine the effects of food restriction and methionine supplementation on immunity in tuco-tucos (Ctenomys talarum). Effects of diet manipulations on nutritional state, inflammatory response to phytohemagglutinin (PHA), and other immune parameters (bacterial killing capacity, natural antibodies, and leukocyte profile) were evaluated. Health and stress parameters and endoparasite loads were assessed to understand more deeply potential effects of treatments on immune status. Individuals under food restriction presented an altered nutritional state as well as increased stress levels (higher N: L ratios) compared with individuals fed ad libitum, and a marked reduction in the inflammatory response to PHA. Supplementation with methionine did not affect any of the parameters analyzed. Endoparasite loads were not affected by treatments. Our results support the idea that food insufficiency can modulate the individual's immune responsiveness through the lack of adequate essential nutrients, metabolic fuel and energetic reserves, or by a detrimental effect of the stress caused by nutrient limitation. We show that the response to PHA previously reported as nonenergetically costly for C. talarum, implies a nutritional cost; an opposite pattern to that previously found for the adaptive antibody response to sheep red blood cells in the same species.
食物摄入量不足或不均衡通常会对免疫反应产生负面影响。然而,食物对一般健康状况的影响会阻碍对这种效应的理解,而一般健康状况又会反过来影响免疫力,此外还存在一般健康状况、免疫能力和并发感染之间的相互作用。本研究的目的是确定食物限制和补充蛋氨酸对草原松田鼠(Ctenomys talarum)免疫力的影响。评估了饮食操作对营养状况、对植物血凝素(PHA)的炎症反应以及其他免疫参数(细菌杀伤能力、天然抗体和白细胞谱)的影响。评估了健康和应激参数以及体内寄生虫负荷,以更深入地了解治疗对免疫状态的潜在影响。与自由采食的个体相比,食物受限的个体营养状况发生改变,应激水平升高(N:L比值更高),并且对PHA的炎症反应明显降低。补充蛋氨酸对所分析的任何参数均无影响。治疗对体内寄生虫负荷没有影响。我们的结果支持这样一种观点,即食物不足可通过缺乏足够的必需营养素、代谢燃料和能量储备,或通过营养限制引起的应激的有害影响来调节个体的免疫反应性。我们表明,先前报道的草原松田鼠对PHA的反应不消耗能量,但这意味着存在营养成本;这与先前在同一物种中发现的对绵羊红细胞的适应性抗体反应的模式相反。