MRC Human Immunology Unit, MRC Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Oxford, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK.
Food and Nutritional Sciences, School of Chemistry, Food, and Pharmacy, University of Reading, Reading, UK.
Med. 2021 Feb 12;2(2):164-179.e12. doi: 10.1016/j.medj.2020.10.004.
How specific nutrients influence adaptive immunity is of broad interest. Iron deficiency is the most common micronutrient deficiency worldwide and imparts a significant burden of global disease; however, its effects on immunity remain unclear.
We used a hepcidin mimetic and several genetic models to examine the effect of low iron availability on T cells and on immune responses to vaccines and viral infection in mice. We examined humoral immunity in human patients with raised hepcidin and low serum iron caused by mutant . We tested the effect of iron supplementation on vaccination-induced humoral immunity in piglets, a natural model of iron deficiency.
We show that low serum iron (hypoferremia), caused by increased hepcidin, severely impairs effector and memory responses to immunizations. The intensified metabolism of activated lymphocytes requires the support of enhanced iron acquisition, which is facilitated by IRP1/2 and TFRC. Accordingly, providing extra iron improved the response to vaccination in hypoferremic mice and piglets, while conversely, hypoferremic humans with chronically increased hepcidin have reduced concentrations of antibodies specific for certain pathogens. Imposing hypoferremia blunted the T cell, B cell, and neutralizing antibody responses to influenza virus infection in mice, allowing the virus to persist and exacerbating lung inflammation and morbidity.
Hypoferremia, a well-conserved physiological innate response to infection, can counteract the development of adaptive immunity. This nutrient trade-off is relevant for understanding and improving immune responses to infections and vaccines in the globally common contexts of iron deficiency and inflammatory disorders.
Medical Research Council, UK.
特定营养素如何影响适应性免疫是一个广泛关注的问题。铁缺乏是全球最常见的微量营养素缺乏症,给全球疾病带来了巨大负担;然而,其对免疫的影响尚不清楚。
我们使用了一种铁调素模拟物和几种遗传模型,来研究低铁可用性对 T 细胞的影响,以及对疫苗和病毒感染的免疫反应的影响。我们在因突变而导致铁调素升高和血清铁降低的人类患者中检查了体液免疫。我们测试了在仔猪(一种天然缺铁模型)中补充铁对疫苗接种引起的体液免疫的影响。
我们表明,由铁调素升高引起的低血清铁(低铁血症)严重损害了免疫接种后的效应和记忆反应。活化淋巴细胞的代谢增强需要增强铁摄取的支持,这是由 IRP1/2 和 TFRC 促进的。因此,在缺铁的小鼠和仔猪中补充额外的铁可以改善疫苗接种的反应,而相反,慢性铁调素升高的缺铁症人类患者对某些病原体的特异性抗体浓度降低。低铁血症使小鼠对流感病毒感染的 T 细胞、B 细胞和中和抗体反应减弱,导致病毒持续存在,并加重肺部炎症和发病率。
低铁血症是感染的一种保守的生理性先天反应,可以抵消适应性免疫的发展。这种营养物质的权衡对于理解和改善在全球常见的缺铁症和炎症性疾病的感染和疫苗的免疫反应具有重要意义。
英国医学研究理事会。