| Literature DB >> 29093710 |
Padmapriyadarsini Chandrasekaran1, Natarajan Saravanan2, Ramalingam Bethunaickan3, Srikanth Tripathy4.
Abstract
Nutrition plays a major role in the management of both acute and chronic diseases, in terms of body's response to the pathogenic organism. An array of nutrients like macro- and micro-nutrients, vitamins, etc., are associated with boosting the host's immune responses against intracellular pathogens including mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb). These nutrients have an immunomodulatory effects in controlling the infection and inflammation process and nutritional deficiency of any form, i.e., malnutrition may lead to nutritionally acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, which greatly increases an individual's susceptibility to progression of infection to disease. This narrative review looks at the various mechanisms by which nutrition or its deficiency leads to impaired cell mediated and humoral immune responses, which in turn affects the ability of an individual to fight M.tb infection or disease. There is very little evidence in the literature that any specific food on its own or a specific quantity can alter the course of TB disease or be effective in the treatment of malnutrition. Further clinical trials or studies will be needed to recommend and to better understand the link between malnutrition, tuberculosis, and impaired immunity.Entities:
Keywords: Mycobacterium tuberculosis; food supplementation for tuberculosis; malnutrition and tuberculosis; nutrition and immunity of tuberculosis; sphingolipid; vitamin D
Year: 2017 PMID: 29093710 PMCID: PMC5651251 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01316
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Role of macro- and micro-nutrients over immunomodulation during TB.
| Nutrient deficiencies | Impact of the deficiency on immunomodulation | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Proteins | ||
| Total protein | ↓ CD4/CD8 ratio | ( |
| ↓ Expression of CD 25 and CD 27 | ||
| ↓ Production of IL-2 and IFN-γ | ||
| Albumin | ↓ Associated with death due to TB | ( |
| Lipids | ||
| n6PUFA | ↓ Actin filament assembly and phagosome maturation | ( |
| n3PUFA | ↑ Actin filament assembly and phagosome maturation | ( |
| n6 and n3 PUFA | Contrasting observation in animal model | ( |
| Eicosanoids | Differentially regulated by | ( |
| Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) | ( | |
| Vitamins | ||
| Vitamin A | ↓ Cell-mediated responses and lympho-proliferative responses | ( |
| Vitamin B6 | ↓ Lymphocyte and natural killer cell activities | ( |
| Vitamin C | ↑Reactive oxygen species and tissue injury due to inflammation caused by | ( |
| Vitamin E | ↑Oxidative stress and suppressed T-cell function | ( |
| Vitamin D | ↓ Macrophage differentiation and phagocytosis | ( |
| ↓ Levels of cathelicidins, β-defensin, hepcidin antibacterial protein, and hCAP18 | ||
| ↑ Proinflamatory cytokines and ↓ anti-inflammatory cytokines | ||
| ↑ MMP 7, 9, and 10 | ||
| Metals | ||
| Copper and zinc | Decreased killing of mycobacteria in phagosomes | ( |
| Iron and manganese | Overload of TB bacilli affects TB diseases progression and clinical outcome | ( |
| NOS2 and TNFα pathways affected | ||
| Minerals | ||
| Ca2+ | Decreased phagocytosis | ( |
| Generation of reactive oxygen molecules | ||
| Phagosome lysosome fusion | ||
Figure 1Tuberculosis: nutrients and immunomodulation.