Department of Twin Research and Genetic Epidemiology, King's College London, St Thomas' Hospital Campus, Westminster Bridge Road, London, SE1 7EH, UK.
Department of Nutritional Sciences, King's College London, Franklin-Wilkins Building, Stamford St, London, SE1 9NH, UK.
BMC Med. 2021 Feb 11;19(1):37. doi: 10.1186/s12916-021-01913-w.
Chronic inflammation, which can be modulated by diet, is linked to high white blood cell counts and correlates with higher cardiometabolic risk and risk of more severe infections, as in the case of COVID-19.
Here, we assessed the association between white blood cell profile (lymphocytes, basophils, eosinophils, neutrophils, monocytes and total white blood cells) as markers of chronic inflammation, habitual diet and gut microbiome composition (determined by sequencing of the 16S RNA) in 986 healthy individuals from the PREDICT-1 nutritional intervention study. We then investigated whether the gut microbiome mediates part of the benefits of vegetable intake on lymphocyte counts.
Higher levels of white blood cells, lymphocytes and basophils were all significantly correlated with lower habitual intake of vegetables, with vegetable intake explaining between 3.59 and 6.58% of variation in white blood cells after adjusting for covariates and multiple testing using false discovery rate (q < 0.1). No such association was seen with fruit intake. A mediation analysis found that 20.00% of the effect of vegetable intake on lymphocyte counts was mediated by one bacterial genus, Collinsella, known to increase with the intake of processed foods and previously associated with fatty liver disease. We further correlated white blood cells to other inflammatory markers including IL6 and GlycA, fasting and post-prandial glucose levels and found a significant relationship between inflammation and diet.
A habitual diet high in vegetables, but not fruits, is linked to a lower inflammatory profile for white blood cells, and a fifth of the effect is mediated by the genus Collinsella.
The ClinicalTrials.gov registration identifier is NCT03479866 .
慢性炎症可以通过饮食进行调节,与高白细胞计数有关,与更高的心血管代谢风险和更严重感染的风险相关,如 COVID-19。
在这里,我们评估了白细胞谱(淋巴细胞、嗜碱性粒细胞、嗜酸性粒细胞、中性粒细胞、单核细胞和总白细胞)作为慢性炎症标志物,习惯性饮食和肠道微生物组组成(通过 16S RNA 测序确定)在来自 PREDICT-1 营养干预研究的 986 名健康个体之间的关联。然后,我们研究了肠道微生物组是否部分介导了蔬菜摄入量对淋巴细胞计数的益处。
更高水平的白细胞、淋巴细胞和嗜碱性粒细胞均与习惯性蔬菜摄入量较低显著相关,在调整协变量和使用错误发现率(q < 0.1)进行多重检验后,蔬菜摄入量解释了白细胞变异的 3.59%至 6.58%。水果摄入量与此无关。中介分析发现,蔬菜摄入量对淋巴细胞计数的影响有 20.00%是通过一种细菌属,即柯林斯氏菌介导的,这种细菌已知随着加工食品摄入量的增加而增加,并且以前与脂肪肝疾病有关。我们进一步将白细胞与其他炎症标志物(包括 IL6 和 GlycA、空腹和餐后血糖水平)相关联,发现炎症与饮食之间存在显著关系。
高蔬菜而不是水果的习惯性饮食与较低的白细胞炎症谱相关,其中五分之一的影响是由柯林斯氏菌属介导的。
ClinicalTrials.gov 注册号为 NCT03479866。