| Literature DB >> 23698167 |
Lisa M Harrison1, Kannan V Balan, Uma S Babu.
Abstract
Functional innate and acquired immune responses are required to protect the host from pathogenic bacterial infections. Modulation of host immune functions may have beneficial or deleterious effects on disease outcome. Different types of dietary fatty acids have been shown to have variable effects on bacterial clearance and disease outcome through suppression or activation of immune responses. Therefore, we have chosen to review research across experimental models and food sources on the effects of commonly consumed fatty acids on the most common food-borne pathogens, including Salmonella sp., Campylobacter sp., Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli, Shigella sp., Listeria monocytogenes, and Staphylococcus aureus. Altogether, the compilation of literature suggests that no single fatty acid is an answer for protection from all food-borne pathogens, and further research is necessary to determine the best approach to improve disease outcomes.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23698167 PMCID: PMC3708349 DOI: 10.3390/nu5051801
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
In vivo studies: Impact of dietary fatty acids on Salmonella control.
| Species | Fatty acid | Measures: Organ colonization or mortality | Effect of Fatty acid on measures | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rhode Island red chickens | Dietary mixture of formic and propionic acids | Decrease (↓) | [ | |
| Leghorn layer chickens | Dietary mixture of formic and propionic acids | Crop and cecal colonization with
| ↓ | [ |
| Broiler chickens | Dietary butyric acid | ↓ | [ | |
| Broiler chickens | Dietary caprylic acid | Ceca, crop, liver, small intestine, cloaca, liver & spleen colonization with SE | Dose dependent reduction | [ |
| Young chicks | Dietary formic or propionic acid | Cecal colonization with
| ↓ | [ |
| White leghorn chickens | Dietary formic, acetic, propionic or butyric acid | Cecal colonization with SE | ↓ with butyric acid | [ |
| Male broiler chicks | Dietary propionic acid | Crop and cecal colonization with ST | No difference (↔) with propionic acid | [ |
| Lohmann white chicks | Dietary caproic acid | Cecal, hepatic and splenic colonization with SE | ↓ | [ |
| Lohmann white chicks | Dietary butyric acid followed by intraesophageal SE infection | Shedding & cecal colonization with SE | ↓ | [ |
| Male Cornish Rockbroiler chickens | Dietary butyric acid | Cecal colonization with SE | ↓ | [ |
| Four day old male Cornish Rock broiler chickens | 0.5% acetate, 0.2% propionate, or 0.1% butyrate individually or in combination | Cecal colonization with SE | ↓ | [ |
| Pigs | Dietary lactic and formic acids | Shedding and sero prevalence | ↓ | [ |
| Six week old piglets | Dietary butyrate, caprylate | Shedding and organ colonization | ↔ with either fatty acid | [ |
| Female Swiss and C57BL/6 mice | Intramuscular injection of liposome containing myristic, stearic or oleic acids | % survival after intraperitoneal (i.p.) infection with ST | Increase (↑) with myristic, stearic acid & oleic acid | [ |
| Male Wistar rats | Dietary corn oil or fish oil (FO) | i.p. infection with SE | ↔ in spleen and liver colonization with FO; ↓ in serum IFN-γ, delayed type hypersensitivity & IgG to
| [ |
↓, Decrease; ↔, No difference; ↑, Increase.
In vitro studies: Impact of dietary fatty acids on Salmonella invasion and clearance.
| Cell model | Fatty acid | Measures: Invasion and clearance | Effect of fatty acid on measures | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study with avian intestinal cell line | Formic, acetic, propionic or butyric acid | SE invasion | ↓ with butyric & propionic acids | [ |
| Study with the chicken cecal epithelial cells | Acetic or butyric acid | SE invasion | ↓ with butyric acid & ↑ with acetic acid | [ |
| Study with chicken macrophage cell line | Arachidonic, α-linolenic, palmitic, stearic, linoleic, eicosapentanoic and docosahexanoic acids | SE clearance | ↑ with α-linolenic & docosahexanoic acids | [ |
| Study with chicken macrophage cell line (HD11), primary monocytes, bone marrow cells & jejunal, cecal explants | Butyric acid | Induction of host defense gene expression and SE clearance | ↑ | [ |
| Study with HD11 and primary monocytes | Butyrate, propionate, acetate individually or in combination; medium chain & long chain fatty acids | Induction of host defense peptide (HDP) gene expression | ↑ HDP expression-Short chain fatty acids most effective (especially in combination), medium chain moderate; long chain fatty acids were marginal | [ |
| Study with porcine intestinal epithelial cell line | Formic, acetic, propionic, butyric, caproic, caprylic, capric acids | ST invasion | ↓ with propionic, butyric, caproic and caprylic acids | [ |
↓, Decrease; ↔, No difference; ↑, Increase.
Impact of dietary fatty acids on Shiga toxin-producing E. coli growth and pathogenesis.
| Fatty Acid | Measures: Bacterial growth or host response | Effect of Fatty acid on measures | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| In vitro studies | ||||
| Bacterial culture | Acetate, propionate, & butyrate | O157:H7 933, 4477, 3081, & DBL No. 192-5-01, 336-2-02, 396-2-02, 647-6-04, & 768-2-01 growth | ↓ | [ |
| Bacterial culture | Acetate, propionate, & butyrate | O157:H7 NCTC 12900 growth | ↓ | [ |
| Bacterial culture | Acetate, propionate, & butyrate | O157:H7 Sakai growth | ↓ | [ |
| Human colonic epithelial cells Caco-2 | Acetate | Translocation of Stx2 | ↓ | [ |
| Human blood monocytes & monocyte cell line U937 | Arachidonic acid, or dihomolinolenic acid | Phagocytosis of unspecified, FITC-labelled O157:H7 strain | ↑ | [ |
| Human renal tubular epithelial cell line ACHN | EPA, arachidonic acid, DHA, or α-linolenic acid | Cell death due to Stxs | ↓ | [ |
| Bacterial culture | Bioconverted EPA or DHA | Unspecified human & ATCC 43888 O157:H7 strains growth | ↓ | [ |
| Bacterial culture | Capric acid, lauric acid, or linoleic acid | CFUs of O157:H7 strain H4420N | ↓ | [ |
| In vivo studies | ||||
| Mice | Acetate | Lethal infection with O157:H7 strain 44 | ↓ | [ |
| Cattle | Canola oil (oleic, linoleic, α-linoleic, & palmitic acids) | Shedding of O157:H7 strains E318N, R508N, E32511, & H4220N | ↔ | [ |
↓, Decrease; ↔, No difference; ↑, Increase.
Impact of dietary fatty acids on Shigella viability and pathogenesis.
| Fatty Acid | Measures: Bacterial survival or clinical symptoms | Effect of Fatty acid on measures | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bacterial culture | Formic or acetic acids |
| [ | |
| Adult rabbits | Acetate, propionate, & butyrate | After intracolonic
| [ | |
| Adult rabbits | Butyrate | After oral
| [ | |
↓, Decrease; ↔, No difference; ↑, Increase.
Impact of dietary fatty acids on Listeria monocytogenes colonization and survival.
| Species | Fatty acid | Measures: Organ colonization or mortality | Effect of fatty acid on measures | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 week old BALB/c mice | Low fat, olive oil, fish oil or hydrogenated coconut oil (20% by weight) for 4 weeks | Fish oil (FO) caused ↑ bacterial survival within peritoneal cells compared to other lipids | [ | |
| Oleic, stearic, eicosapentanoic, linoleic and linolenic acids | Bactericidal activity was measured 24 h post infection | Bacterial survival was ↑ with eicosapentanoic, linoleic and linolenic acids compared to control and other saturated fatty acids | [ | |
| 8–10 week old BALB/c mice | Low fat, olive oil, fish oil or sunflower oil for 4 weeks | ↑ LM mediated cytotoxicity of spleen cells by FO and olive oil; FO caused immunosuppression | [ | |
| 8–10 week old BALB/c mice | Low fat, olive oil, fish oil or hydrogenated coconut oil (20% by weight) for 4 weeks | 105 LM through tail vein | ↓ survival and increased liver and spleen colonization in FO group | [ |
| 8–10 week old BALB/c mice | Low fat, olive oil, fish oil or hydrogenated coconut oil (20% by weight) for 4 weeks | 104 LM through tail vein | ↑ spleen colonization in FO group | [ |
| 8–10 week old BALB/c mice | Low fat, olive oil, fish oil or hydrogenated coconut oil (20% by weight) for 4 weeks | 104 LM through tail vein | ↑ spleen colonization in FO group at 24, 48, 72 and 96 h post infection (PI) and in hydrogenated coconut oil group at 96 h PI | [ |
| 8–10 week old BALB/c mice | Low fat, olive oil, fish oil or hydrogenated coconut oil (20% by weight) for 4 weeks | No effect on cytoxicity by any of the dietary fatty acid | [ | |
| 10 week old BALB/cmice | Low fat, olive oil, fish oil or hydrogenated coconut oil (20% by weight) for 4 weeks | 104 LM through tail vein | ↓ survival and ↑ spleen colonization in all oil groups compared to low fat group | [ |
| 8 week old BALB/c mice | Low fat, olive oil, fish oil or sunflower oil for 8 weeks | 100% survival in the FO group; spleen colonization ↓ at 72 h compared to 24 h in FO group | [ | |
| 3–4 week old BALB/cAnNHsd mice | Lard or fish oil diet for 4 weeks | ↑ spleen and liver colonization in the FO compared to the lard group | [ | |
| 3 week old C3H/HeN mice | Lard, soybean or fish oil diet for 4 weeks | i.p. infection with 2 × 106 LM | Survival 100%, 58% and 33% for lard, soybean or fish oil, respectively ↑ spleen colonization in FO group | [ |
| 3–4 week old BALB/cAnNHsd mice | Lard or fish oil diet for 4 weeks | Intravenous infection (i.v.) with 1.4 × 104 LM | ↑ spleen and liver colonization in the FO compared to the lard group | [ |
| 3–4 week old BALB/cAnNHsd mice | Lard or fish oil diet for 4 weeks | i.v. infection with 105 or 106 LM | ↓ survival of mice in FO compared to lard group (100% at 105 dose and 30% at 106 dose) by day 14; ↑ spleen and liver colonization in FO compared to lard group | [ |
| 6 week old female CD1 mice | Conjugated linoleic acid or control diet for 14 or 32 days | i.p. LM 2.5 × 105 or 1.5 × 105 in the two experiments, respectively | ↔ spleen and liver colonization or histopathological changes due to LM infection | [ |
| 9 week old male Wistar rat | Rats were fed 10% or 40% fat diets corresponding to 4.2% & 19.6% milk fat for 2 weeks.
| Oral infection by gastric gavage with 5 × 109 LM
| High milk fat diet ↓ fecal LM excretion, ↑ listericidal activity of gastric contents listericidal activity of fatty acids ranked in the order C14:0 < C18:2 < C10:0 < C18:1 < C12:0 | [ |
↓, Decrease; ↔, No difference; ↑, Increase.
Impact of dietary fatty acids on Staphylococcus aureus infection.
| Animal species/cell culture | Fatty Acid | Measures: Organ Colonization or mortality | Effect of Fatty acid on measures | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cystic fibrosis (CF) patients | Correlating essential fatty acid deficiency to respiratory disease | Increased susceptibility of CF patients to | Plasma phospholipid fatty acids revealed that all CF patients had ↓ | [ |
| 5–7 week old male C57BL/6 or Ob/Ob mice | Low (4%) | 5 × 107 cfu intravenous injection in the tail vein | ↓ survival, 10 fold higher bacteria in kidneys, ↑ serum IL-1β, ↓ reactive oxygen species by peritoneal cells in high fat group | [ |
| One day old New Zealand white rabbits | High (5 g/kg body weight [bw]) or low (0.22 g/kg bw) fish oil or safflower oil for 8 days | 30 min exposure to | ↓ bacterial clearance in high fish and safflower oil groups | [ |
| 28 day old pigs | 10% fish oil, sunflower oil or animal fat for 35 days | After 3 weeks of dietary treatment, pigs had aortic vascular prosthetic graft inserted which was inoculated with 106 cfu
| ↔ in clinical signs of infection such as rectal temperature, hindquarter function, general appearance and feed intake ↑ body weight gain in FO compared to sunflower oil group | [ |
| 5–7 week old BALB/c mice for | Daily gavage with origanum oil, monolaurin or the combination in 0.2 mL olive oil for 30 days | Injected with 5 × LD50
| 4/8 mice survived in the monolaurin group at 30 days & 5/8 survived in combination group; monolaurin & origanum oils were most potent against
| [ |
| Final concentrations of fatty acids were 0, 12.5, 25, 50, 100 or 200 μg/mL | 3 | 7 most potent inhibitors were lauric acid, glycerol monolaurate, capric, myristic, linoleic & conjugated linoleic acids; lauric, capric and myristic acids reduced overall growth; linoleic and conjugated linoleic acids delayed the initiation of exponential growth | [ | |
| 0, 0.25, 0.5 & 1 mM linoleic acid | 4 wild type
| ↓ survival of all 3 strains of | [ | |
| Lauric acid, monolaurin and lactic acid, virgin coconut oil | 2 strains of | ↓ bacterial counts with lauric acid, monolaurin and lactic acid; ↔ with virgin coconut oil | [ | |
| Lauric acid, | All lipids were bactericidal, except sapienic acid | [ | ||
| Sugar fatty acid esters with (C8–C16) | Fatty acids C10–C16 ↓ biofilm formation; C14 and C16 were bactericidal | [ | ||
| Capric (20ppm), lauric & α-linolenic acids (1 ppm) | ↓ bacterial growth with lauric & α-linolenic acids but ↔ with capric acid | [ |
↓, Decrease; ↔, No difference; ↑, Increase.