United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Grand Forks Human Nutrition Research Center, Grand Forks, North Dakota.
United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Grand Forks Human Nutrition Research Center, Grand Forks, North Dakota.
J Nutr Biochem. 2021 Jun;92:108613. doi: 10.1016/j.jnutbio.2021.108613. Epub 2021 Mar 8.
Adoption of an obesogenic diet low in calcium and vitamin D (CaD) leads to increased obesity, colonic inflammation, and cancer. However, the underlying mechanisms remain to be elucidated. We tested the hypothesis that CaD supplementation (from inadequacy to adequacy) may reduce colonic inflammation, oncogenic signaling, and dysbiosis in the colon of C57BL/6 mice fed a Western diet. Male C57/BL6 mice (4-weeks old) were assigned to 3 dietary groups for 36 weeks: (1) AIN76A as a control diet (AIN); (2) a defined rodent "new Western diet" (NWD); or (3) NWD with CaD supplementation (NWD/CaD). Compared to the AIN, mice receiving the NWD or NWD/CaD exhibited more than 0.2-fold increase in the levels of plasma leptin, tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) and body weight. The levels of plasma interleukin 6 (IL-6), inflammatory cell infiltration, and β-catenin/Ki67 protein (oncogenic signaling) were increased more than 0.8-fold in the NWD (but not NWD/CaD) group compared to the AIN group. Consistent with the inflammatory phenotype, colonic secondary bile acid (inflammatory bacterial metabolite) levels increased more than 0.4-fold in the NWD group compared to the NWD/CaD and AIN groups. Furthermore, the abundance of colonic Proteobacteria (e.g., Parasutterela), considered signatures of dysbiosis, was increased more than four-fold; and the α diversity of colonic bacterial species, indicative of health, was decreased by 30% in the NWD group compared to the AIN and NWD/CaD groups. Collectively, CaD adequacy reduces colonic inflammation, β-catenin oncogenic signaling, secondary bile acids, and bacterial dysbiosis in mice fed with a Western diet.
采用低钙和维生素 D(CaD)的致肥胖饮食会导致肥胖、结肠炎症和癌症增加。然而,其潜在机制仍有待阐明。我们测试了这样一个假设,即 CaD 补充(从不足到充足)可能会减少喂食西式饮食的 C57BL/6 小鼠结肠中的炎症、致癌信号和菌群失调。雄性 C57/BL6 小鼠(4 周龄)被分配到 3 种饮食组,持续 36 周:(1)AIN76A 作为对照饮食(AIN);(2)一种确定的啮齿动物“新西式饮食”(NWD);或(3)NWD 加 CaD 补充(NWD/CaD)。与 AIN 相比,接受 NWD 或 NWD/CaD 饮食的小鼠血浆瘦素、肿瘤坏死因子 α(TNF-α)和体重水平增加了 0.2 倍以上。与 AIN 组相比,NWD 组(但不是 NWD/CaD 组)的血浆白细胞介素 6(IL-6)、炎症细胞浸润和 β-连环蛋白/Ki67 蛋白(致癌信号)水平增加了 0.8 倍以上。与炎症表型一致,与 NWD/CaD 和 AIN 组相比,NWD 组结肠次级胆汁酸(炎症细菌代谢物)水平增加了 0.4 倍以上。此外,被认为是菌群失调特征的结肠变形菌(如 Parasutterella)的丰度增加了 4 倍以上;与 AIN 和 NWD/CaD 组相比,指示健康的结肠细菌种类的α多样性减少了 30%。总之,CaD 充足可减少喂食西式饮食的小鼠的结肠炎症、β-连环蛋白致癌信号、次级胆汁酸和细菌菌群失调。