Section of Allergy & Immunology, School of Medicine, University of Colorado Denver, Children's Hospital Colorado, Anschutz Medical Campus, 13123 East 16th Avenue, Aurora, CO 80045, USA.
Center of Allergy and Environment (ZAUM), Technical University and Helmholtz Center Munich, Biedersteinerstrass 29, 80802 Munich, Germany.
Nutrients. 2020 Mar 19;12(3):818. doi: 10.3390/nu12030818.
Enthusiasm exists for the potential of diet to impact the immune system, prevent disease and its therapeutic potential. Herein, we describe the challenge to nutrition scientists in defining this relationship through case studies of diets and nutrients in the context of allergic and autoimmune diseases. Moderate-quality evidence exists from both human intervention and observational studies to suggest that diet and individual nutrients can influence systemic markers of immune function and inflammation; numerous challenges exist for demonstrating the impact of defined diets and nutrient interventions on clearly influencing immune-mediated-clinical disease endpoints. A growing body of evidence suggests that further consideration of dietary patterns, immune system and gut microbiome composition and function, and subsequent epigenetic modifications are needed to improve our understanding of diet-immune system interactions.
人们热衷于研究饮食对免疫系统的影响,以预防疾病并发挥其治疗潜力。在此,我们通过过敏性和自身免疫性疾病背景下的饮食和营养素案例研究,描述了营养科学家在定义这种关系方面所面临的挑战。有来自人体干预和观察性研究的中等质量证据表明,饮食和个别营养素可以影响全身免疫功能和炎症的标志物;但要证明明确的饮食和营养干预对免疫介导的临床疾病终点有影响,仍存在许多挑战。越来越多的证据表明,需要进一步考虑饮食模式、免疫系统和肠道微生物组的组成和功能,以及随后的表观遗传修饰,以提高我们对饮食-免疫系统相互作用的理解。