Klasing K C
Department of Avian Sciences, University of California, Davis 95616, USA.
Poult Sci. 1998 Aug;77(8):1119-25. doi: 10.1093/ps/77.8.1119.
Dietary characteristics can modulate a bird's susceptibility to infectious challenges and subtle influences due to the level of nutrients or the types of ingredients may at times be of critical importance. This review considers seven mechanisms for nutritional modulation of resistance to infectious disease in poultry. 1) Nutrition may impact the development of the immune system, both in ovo and in the first weeks posthatch. Micronutrient deficiencies that affect developmental events, such as the seeding of lymphoid organs and clonal expansion of lymphocyte clones, can negatively impact the immune system later in life. 2) A substrate role of nutrients is necessary for the immune response so that responding cells can divide and synthesize effector molecules. The quantitative need for nutrients for supporting a normal immune system, as well as the proliferation of leukocytes and the production of antibodies during an infectious challenge, is very small relative to uses for growth or egg production. It is likely that the systemic acute phase response that accompanies most infectious challenges is a more significant consumer of nutrients than the immune system itself. 3) The low concentration of some nutrients (e.g., iron) in body fluids makes them the limiting substrates for the proliferation of invading pathogens and the supply of these nutrients is further limited during the immune response. 4) Some nutrients (e.g., fatty acids and vitamins A, D, and E) have direct regulatory actions on leukocytes by binding to intracellular receptors or by modifying the release of second messengers. 5) The diet may also have indirect regulatory effects that are mediated by the classical endocrine system. 6) Physical and chemical aspects of the diet can modify the populations of microorganisms in the gastrointestinal tract, the capacity of pathogens to attach to enterocytes, and the integrity of the intestinal epithelium.
饮食特征可调节鸟类对传染性挑战的易感性,由于营养水平或成分类型所产生的微妙影响有时可能至关重要。本综述探讨了家禽对传染病抵抗力的营养调节的七种机制。1)营养可能会影响免疫系统在胚胎期和出壳后最初几周的发育。影响发育事件(如淋巴器官的播种和淋巴细胞克隆的克隆扩增)的微量营养素缺乏,会对后期的免疫系统产生负面影响。2)营养物质的底物作用对于免疫反应是必要的,以便反应细胞能够分裂并合成效应分子。相对于生长或产蛋的用途而言,支持正常免疫系统以及在感染挑战期间白细胞增殖和抗体产生所需的营养物质的定量需求非常小。很可能伴随大多数感染挑战的全身性急性期反应比免疫系统本身消耗更多的营养物质。3)体液中某些营养物质(如铁)的低浓度使其成为入侵病原体增殖的限制底物,并且在免疫反应期间这些营养物质的供应会进一步受限。4)某些营养物质(如脂肪酸以及维生素A、D和E)通过与细胞内受体结合或通过改变第二信使的释放,对白细胞具有直接调节作用。5)饮食也可能具有由经典内分泌系统介导的间接调节作用。6)饮食的物理和化学方面可以改变胃肠道中的微生物种群、病原体附着于肠上皮细胞的能力以及肠上皮的完整性。