Medical Research Council Translational Immune Discovery Unit, Medical Research Council Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, John Radcliffe Hospital, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Medical Research Council Translational Immune Discovery Unit, Medical Research Council Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, John Radcliffe Hospital, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Adv Nutr. 2024 Jun;15(6):100238. doi: 10.1016/j.advnut.2024.100238. Epub 2024 May 8.
Vaccines can prevent infectious diseases, but their efficacy varies, and factors impacting vaccine effectiveness remain unclear. Iron deficiency is the most common nutrient deficiency, affecting >2 billion individuals. It is particularly common in areas with high infectious disease burden and in groups that are routinely vaccinated, such as infants, pregnant women, and the elderly. Recent evidence suggests that iron deficiency and low serum iron (hypoferremia) not only cause anemia but also may impair adaptive immunity and vaccine efficacy. A report of human immunodeficiency caused by defective iron transport underscored the necessity of iron for adaptive immune responses and spurred research in this area. Sufficient iron is essential for optimal production of plasmablasts and IgG responses by human B-cells in vitro and in vivo. The increased metabolism of activated lymphocytes depends on the high-iron acquisition, and hypoferremia, especially when occurring during lymphocyte expansion, adversely affects multiple facets of adaptive immunity, and may lead to prolonged inhibition of T-cell memory. In mice, hypoferremia suppresses the adaptive immune response to influenza infection, resulting in more severe pulmonary disease. In African infants, anemia and/or iron deficiency at the time of vaccination predict decreased response to diphtheria, pertussis, and pneumococcal vaccines, and response to measles vaccine may be increased by iron supplementation. In this review, we examine the emerging evidence that iron deficiency may limit adaptive immunity and vaccine responses. We discuss the molecular mechanisms and evidence from animal and human studies, highlight important unknowns, and propose a framework of key research questions to better understand iron-vaccine interactions.
疫苗可以预防传染病,但它们的功效各不相同,影响疫苗效果的因素仍不清楚。铁缺乏是最常见的营养缺乏症,影响着超过 20 亿人。它在传染病负担高的地区和经常接种疫苗的人群中尤为常见,如婴儿、孕妇和老年人。最近的证据表明,铁缺乏和低血清铁(hypoferremia)不仅会导致贫血,还可能损害适应性免疫和疫苗效果。一份关于因铁转运缺陷导致人类免疫缺陷的报告强调了铁对适应性免疫反应的必要性,并推动了该领域的研究。足够的铁对于人类 B 细胞在体外和体内产生浆母细胞和 IgG 反应是至关重要的。活化淋巴细胞的代谢增加依赖于高铁的摄取,而 hypoferremia,尤其是在淋巴细胞扩增期间发生时,会对适应性免疫的多个方面产生不利影响,并可能导致 T 细胞记忆的长期抑制。在小鼠中,hypoferremia 抑制了对流感感染的适应性免疫反应,导致更严重的肺部疾病。在非洲婴儿中,接种疫苗时的贫血和/或铁缺乏会预测对白喉、百日咳和肺炎球菌疫苗的反应降低,而铁补充剂可能会增加麻疹疫苗的反应。在这篇综述中,我们研究了铁缺乏可能限制适应性免疫和疫苗反应的新证据。我们讨论了分子机制以及来自动物和人类研究的证据,突出了重要的未知领域,并提出了一个关键研究问题的框架,以更好地理解铁-疫苗相互作用。