Norton J D, Yang S P, Diffley P
Infect Immun. 1986 Feb;51(2):455-60. doi: 10.1128/iai.51.2.455-460.1986.
Although it is well documented that severe protein deprivation inhibits the development of the immune response and exacerbates certain infections, little has been done to study the effects of native diets on endemic diseases or immunity. Therefore, protein-restricted diets were formulated for mice to mimic the sources and amounts measured in human diets of the Batouri region of Cameroon, endemic for African trypanosomiasis. Weanling C57BL/6 female mice were fed a diet that contained 73% of the recommended daily allowance (RDA) of protein. The sources of protein were all plant (cornmeal), all animal (casein), or a ratio that reflected the native diet (2.2 parts plant to 1 part animal protein). Diets were isocaloric on a weight basis, equal in lipids, and adequate in vitamins and minerals. Control mice were fed laboratory chow or two times the RDA of animal protein (casein). Mice fed only cornmeal or the native diets consumed as much food but did not gain as much weight as mice fed only animal protein, indicating the poorer quality of protein in their diets. Upon infection with Trypanosoma brucei gambiense, however, significantly higher numbers of these mice controlled the first peak of parasitemia and survived the infection as compared with mice fed the other three diets. Since all mice developed patent infections and the parasite growth rate was unaffected by diet, innate immune factors were ruled out as the cause for the higher level of resistance to the parasite. To determine whether diet affected the development of the immune system, weanling mice were maintained on diets for 30 days before immunization with sheep erythrocytes or trinitrophenylated Ficoll. Mice fed only plant protein or native diets elicited higher direct plaque-forming-cell responses to both the T-cell-dependent and T-cell-independent antigens. Since variant-specific immunity which controls levels of African trypanosomes in the blood is a T-cell-independent humoral immunoglobulin M response, this suggests that cornmeal, a protein of poor quality, was adequate for the development of humoral immunity and resistance to African trypanosomiasis while casein, an animal protein of high quality, was not. This provides more evidence that diet plays an important role in infection and immunity.
虽然有充分的文献记载,严重的蛋白质缺乏会抑制免疫反应的发展并加剧某些感染,但对于天然饮食对地方病或免疫力的影响却鲜有研究。因此,为小鼠配制了蛋白质限制饮食,以模拟喀麦隆巴图里地区人类饮食中所测得的蛋白质来源和含量,该地区是非洲锥虫病的流行区。将断乳的C57BL/6雌性小鼠喂以含73%推荐每日摄入量(RDA)蛋白质的饮食。蛋白质来源全部为植物性(玉米粉)、全部为动物性(酪蛋白),或为反映当地饮食的比例(植物蛋白与动物蛋白比例为2.2:1)。饮食在重量基础上是等热量的,脂质含量相同,维生素和矿物质充足。对照小鼠喂以实验室饲料或两倍RDA的动物蛋白(酪蛋白)。仅喂玉米粉或天然饮食的小鼠摄入的食物量相同,但体重增加不如仅喂动物蛋白的小鼠,这表明它们饮食中的蛋白质质量较差。然而,在用布氏冈比亚锥虫感染后,与喂其他三种饮食的小鼠相比,这些小鼠中有显著更多数量的小鼠控制了寄生虫血症的第一个高峰并在感染中存活下来。由于所有小鼠都出现了明显的感染,且寄生虫生长速率不受饮食影响,因此排除了先天免疫因素是对寄生虫抵抗力较高的原因。为了确定饮食是否影响免疫系统的发育,在对断乳小鼠用绵羊红细胞或三硝基苯化的菲可进行免疫之前,将它们维持在相应饮食上30天。仅喂植物蛋白或天然饮食的小鼠对T细胞依赖性和T细胞非依赖性抗原均引发了更高的直接噬斑形成细胞反应。由于控制血液中非洲锥虫水平的变异特异性免疫是一种T细胞非依赖性体液免疫球蛋白M反应,这表明质量较差的蛋白质玉米粉足以促进体液免疫和对非洲锥虫病的抵抗力,而高质量的动物蛋白酪蛋白则不然。这提供了更多证据表明饮食在感染和免疫中起重要作用。