Department of Internal Medicine, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
Department of Medical Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical University College, (KCMUCo), Moshi, Tanzania.
Nat Immunol. 2021 Mar;22(3):287-300. doi: 10.1038/s41590-021-00867-8. Epub 2021 Feb 11.
Sub-Saharan Africa currently experiences an unprecedented wave of urbanization, which has important consequences for health and disease patterns. This study aimed to investigate and integrate the immune and metabolic consequences of rural or urban lifestyles and the role of nutritional changes associated with urban living. In a cohort of 323 healthy Tanzanians, urban as compared to rural living was associated with a pro-inflammatory immune phenotype, both at the transcript and protein levels. We identified different food-derived and endogenous circulating metabolites accounting for these differences. Serum from urban dwellers induced reprogramming of innate immune cells with higher tumor necrosis factor production upon microbial re-stimulation in an in vitro model of trained immunity. These data demonstrate important shifts toward an inflammatory phenotype associated with an urban lifestyle and provide new insights into the underlying dietary and metabolic factors, which may affect disease epidemiology in sub-Sahara African countries.
撒哈拉以南非洲目前正经历着一场前所未有的城市化浪潮,这对健康和疾病模式有着重要的影响。本研究旨在调查和整合农村或城市生活方式的免疫和代谢后果,以及与城市生活相关的营养变化的作用。在一个由 323 名坦桑尼亚健康人组成的队列中,与农村生活相比,城市生活与炎症免疫表型有关,无论是在转录水平还是蛋白水平。我们发现了不同的食物衍生和内源性循环代谢物,这些代谢物可以解释这些差异。来自城市居民的血清在体外训练免疫模型中,在微生物再刺激时诱导先天免疫细胞重新编程,产生更高水平的肿瘤坏死因子。这些数据表明,与城市生活方式相关的炎症表型发生了重要转变,并为可能影响撒哈拉以南非洲国家疾病流行病学的潜在饮食和代谢因素提供了新的见解。