James Comprehensive Cancer Center, The Ohio State University, Columbus, USA.
Department of Veterinary Biosciences, The Ohio State University, Columbus, USA.
Sci Rep. 2020 Dec 11;10(1):21824. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-78762-9.
Chronic pancreatitis (CP) is a fibro-inflammatory syndrome in individuals who develop persistent pathological responses to parenchymal injury or stress. Novel therapeutic or dietary interventions that could lessen inflammation in this disease could significantly improve quality of life in patients with CP. Complex dietary foods like soy and tomatoes are composed of active metabolites with anti-inflammatory effects. Data from our group reports that bioactive agents in soy and tomatoes can reduce pro-inflammatory cytokines and suppressive immune populations. Additionally, our team has developed a novel soy-tomato juice currently being studied in healthy individuals with no toxicities, and good compliance and bioavailability. Thus, we hypothesize that administration of a soy-tomato enriched diet can reduce inflammation and severity of CP. C57BL/6 mice were injected intraperitoneally with 50 μg/kg caeurlein (7 hourly injections, twice weekly) for 6 weeks to induce CP. After 4 weeks of caerulein injections, mice were administered a control or a soy-tomato enriched diet for 2 weeks. Disease severity was measured via immunohistochemical analysis of pancreata measuring loss of acini, fibrosis, inflammation, and necrosis. Serum lipase and amylase levels were analyzed at the end of the study. Inflammatory factors in the serum and pancreas, and immune populations in the spleen of mice were analyzed by cytokine multiplex detection, qRT-PCR, and flow cytometry respectively. Infra-red (IR) sensing of mice was used to monitor spontaneous activity and distress of mice. Mice fed a soy-tomato enriched diet had a significantly reduced level of inflammation and severity of CP (p = 0.032) compared to mice administered a control diet with restored serum lipase and amylase levels (p < 0.05). Mice with CP fed a soy-tomato diet had a reduction in inflammatory factors (TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-5) and suppressive immune populations (myeloid-derived suppressor cells; MDSC) compared to control diet fed mice (p < 0.05). Infra-red sensing to monitor spontaneous activity of mice showed that soy-tomato enriched diet improved total activity and overall health of mice with CP (p = 0.055) and CP mice on a control diet were determined to spend more time at rest (p = 0.053). These pre-clinical results indicate that a soy-tomato enriched diet may be a novel treatment approach to reduce inflammation and pain in patients with CP.
慢性胰腺炎(CP)是一种纤维炎症综合征,在个体中,对实质损伤或应激产生持续的病理反应。能够减轻这种疾病炎症的新的治疗或饮食干预措施可能会显著改善 CP 患者的生活质量。像大豆和西红柿这样的复杂饮食食物由具有抗炎作用的活性代谢物组成。我们小组的数据报告表明,大豆和西红柿中的生物活性物质可以减少促炎细胞因子和抑制性免疫细胞群。此外,我们的团队开发了一种新型的大豆-西红柿汁,目前正在健康个体中进行研究,没有毒性,并且具有良好的顺应性和生物利用度。因此,我们假设给予富含大豆-西红柿的饮食可以减轻 CP 的炎症和严重程度。C57BL/6 小鼠通过腹腔内注射 50μg/kg 钙网蛋白(每周两次,每周 7 次)6 周以诱导 CP。在钙网蛋白注射 4 周后,小鼠给予对照或富含大豆-西红柿的饮食 2 周。通过测量胰腺中腺泡丢失、纤维化、炎症和坏死的免疫组化分析来测量疾病的严重程度。研究结束时分析血清脂肪酶和淀粉酶水平。通过细胞因子多重检测、qRT-PCR 和流式细胞术分别分析血清和胰腺中的炎症因子以及小鼠脾脏中的免疫细胞群。使用红外(IR)感应监测小鼠的自发活动和不适。与给予对照饮食的小鼠相比,给予富含大豆-西红柿饮食的小鼠的炎症水平和 CP 严重程度显著降低(p=0.032),并且血清脂肪酶和淀粉酶水平恢复(p<0.05)。与给予对照饮食的小鼠相比,患有 CP 的喂食大豆-西红柿饮食的小鼠的炎症因子(TNF-α、IL-1β、IL-5)和抑制性免疫细胞群(髓样来源的抑制细胞;MDSC)减少(p<0.05)。监测小鼠自发活动的红外感应表明,富含大豆-西红柿的饮食改善了 CP 小鼠的总活动和整体健康状况(p=0.055),并且 CP 小鼠在对照饮食上花费更多的时间休息(p=0.053)。这些临床前结果表明,富含大豆-西红柿的饮食可能是减轻 CP 患者炎症和疼痛的一种新的治疗方法。