Bjørknes University College, Department of Health Sciences, Oslo, Norway.
Department of Nutrition, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2021 Feb 2;113(2):277-289. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/nqaa322.
SFAs play the leading role in 1 of the greatest controversies in nutrition science. Relative to PUFAs, SFAs generally increase circulating concentrations of LDL cholesterol, a risk factor for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD). However, the purpose of regulatory mechanisms that control the diet-induced lipoprotein cholesterol dynamics is rarely discussed in the context of human adaptive biology. We argue that better mechanistic explanations can help resolve lingering controversies, with the potential to redefine aspects of research, clinical practice, dietary advice, public health management, and food policy. In this paper we propose a novel model, the homeoviscous adaptation to dietary lipids (HADL) model, which explains changes in lipoprotein cholesterol as adaptive homeostatic adjustments that serve to maintain cell membrane fluidity and hence optimal cell function. Due to the highly variable intake of fatty acids in humans and other omnivore species, we propose that circulating lipoproteins serve as a buffer to enable the rapid redistribution of cholesterol molecules between specific cells and tissues that is necessary with changes in dietary fatty acid supply. Hence, circulating levels of LDL cholesterol may change for nonpathological reasons. Accordingly, an SFA-induced raise in LDL cholesterol in healthy individuals could represent a normal rather than a pathologic response. These regulatory mechanisms may become disrupted secondarily to pathogenic processes in association with insulin resistance and the presence of other ASCVD risk factors, as supported by evidence showing diverging lipoprotein responses in healthy individuals as opposed to those with metabolic disorders such as insulin resistance and obesity. Corresponding with the model, we suggest alternative contributing factors to the association between elevated LDL cholesterol concentrations and ASCVD, involving dietary factors beyond SFAs, such as an increased endotoxin load from diet-gut microbiome interactions and subsequent chronic low-grade inflammation that interferes with fine-tuned signaling pathways.
饱和脂肪酸(SFAs)在营养科学中最大的争议之一中扮演着重要角色。与多不饱和脂肪酸(PUFAs)相比,SFAs 通常会增加 LDL 胆固醇(动脉粥样硬化性心血管疾病(ASCVD)的一个风险因素)的循环浓度。然而,控制饮食诱导的脂蛋白胆固醇动态的调节机制的目的在人类适应生物学的背景下很少被讨论。我们认为,更好的机制解释可以帮助解决挥之不去的争议,并有可能重新定义研究、临床实践、饮食建议、公共卫生管理和食品政策的各个方面。在本文中,我们提出了一个新的模型,即饮食脂质的同源适应(HADL)模型,该模型将脂蛋白胆固醇的变化解释为适应性的体内平衡调整,旨在维持细胞膜的流动性,从而维持最佳的细胞功能。由于人类和其他杂食动物的脂肪酸摄入量非常可变,我们提出循环脂蛋白作为一种缓冲剂,使胆固醇分子在饮食脂肪酸供应变化时能够在特定细胞和组织之间快速重新分配。因此,LDL 胆固醇的循环水平可能会因非病理原因而发生变化。因此,健康个体中 SFA 引起的 LDL 胆固醇升高可能代表正常而非病理反应。这些调节机制可能会因与胰岛素抵抗和其他 ASCVD 风险因素相关的致病过程而 secondary 受到破坏,正如证据所表明的,与代谢紊乱(如胰岛素抵抗和肥胖)的个体相比,健康个体的脂蛋白反应存在分歧。与该模型相对应,我们提出了与升高的 LDL 胆固醇浓度和 ASCVD 之间的关联相关的其他促成因素,这些因素涉及除 SFAs 之外的饮食因素,例如饮食-肠道微生物群相互作用引起的内毒素负荷增加以及随后的慢性低度炎症,干扰了精细调控的信号通路。