Kelley D S, Taylor P C, Nelson G J, Schmidt P C, Mackey B E, Kyle D
USDA, ARS, Western Human Nutrition Research Center, Presidio of San Francisco, California 94129, USA.
Lipids. 1997 Apr;32(4):449-56. doi: 10.1007/s11745-997-0059-3.
Arachidonic acid (AA) is a precursor of eicosanoids, which influence human health and the in vitro activity of immune cells. We therefore examined the effects of dietary AA on the immune response (IR) of 10 healthy men living at our metabolic suite for 130 d. All subjects were fed a basal diet containing 27 energy percentage (en%) fat, 57 en% carbohydrate, and 16 en% protein (AA, 200 mg/d) for the first and last 15 d of the study. Additional AA (1.5 g/d) was incorporated into the diet of six men from day 16 to 65 while the remaining four subjects continued to eat the basal diet. The diets of the two groups were crossed-over from day 66 to 115. In vitro indexes of IR were examined using the blood samples drawn on days 15, 58, 65, 108, 115, and 127. The subjects were immunized with the measles/mumps/rubella vaccine on day 35 and with the influenza vaccine on day 92. Dietary AA did not influence many indexes of IR (peripheral blood mononuclear cell proliferation in response to phytohemagglutinin, Concanavalin A, pokeweed, measles/mumps/rubella, and influenza vaccines prior to immunization, and natural killer cell activity). The post-immunization proliferation in response to influenza vaccine was about fourfold higher in the group receiving high-AA diet compared to the group receiving low-AA diet (P = 0.02). Analysis of variance of the data pooled from both groups showed that the number of circulating granulocytes was significantly (P = 0.03) more when the subjects were fed the high-AA diet than when they were fed the low-AA diet. The small increases in granulocyte count and the in vitro proliferation in response to influenza vaccine caused by dietary AA may not be of clinical significance. However, the lack of any adverse effects on IR indicates that supplementation with AA may be done safely when needed for other health reasons.
花生四烯酸(AA)是类二十烷酸的前体,类二十烷酸会影响人体健康和免疫细胞的体外活性。因此,我们研究了膳食AA对10名在我们的代谢套房中生活130天的健康男性免疫反应(IR)的影响。在研究的第1天和最后15天,所有受试者均食用基础饮食,该饮食包含27能量百分比(en%)的脂肪、57 en%的碳水化合物和16 en%的蛋白质(AA,200毫克/天)。从第16天到65天,6名男性的饮食中额外添加了AA(1.5克/天),而其余4名受试者继续食用基础饮食。两组的饮食在第66天到115天进行了交叉。使用在第15天、58天、65天、108天、115天和127天采集的血样检测IR的体外指标。受试者在第35天接种麻疹/腮腺炎/风疹疫苗,在第92天接种流感疫苗。膳食AA并未影响许多IR指标(免疫前外周血单核细胞对植物血凝素、刀豆蛋白A、商陆、麻疹/腮腺炎/风疹和流感疫苗的增殖反应,以及自然杀伤细胞活性)。与接受低AA饮食的组相比,接受高AA饮食的组在接种流感疫苗后的增殖反应高出约四倍(P = 0.02)。对两组汇总数据的方差分析表明,受试者食用高AA饮食时循环粒细胞数量显著多于食用低AA饮食时(P = 0.03)。膳食AA导致的粒细胞计数小幅增加和对流感疫苗的体外增殖反应可能不具有临床意义。然而,对IR没有任何不良影响表明,出于其他健康原因需要时,补充AA可能是安全的。