| Literature DB >> 34135894 |
Evanthia Tourkochristou1, Christos Triantos2, Athanasia Mouzaki1.
Abstract
Through food intake, humans obtain a variety of nutrients that are essential for growth, cellular function, tissue development, energy, and immune defense. A special interaction between nutrients and gut-associated lymphoid tissue occurs in the intestinal tract. Enterocytes of the intestinal barrier act as sensors for antigens from nutrients and the intestinal microbiota, which they deliver to the underlying immune system of the lamina propria, triggering an immune response. Studies investigating the mechanism of influence of nutrition on immunological outcomes have highlighted an important role of macronutrients (proteins, carbohydrates, fatty acids) and micronutrients (vitamins, minerals, phytochemicals, antioxidants, probiotics) in modulating immune homeostasis. Nutrients exert their role in innate immunity and inflammation by regulating the expression of TLRs, pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines, thus interfering with immune cell crosstalk and signaling. Chemical substrates derived from nutrient metabolism may act as cofactors or blockers of enzymatic activity, influencing molecular pathways and chemical reactions associated with microbial killing, inflammation, and oxidative stress. Immune cell function appears to be influenced by certain nutrients that form parts of the cell membrane structure and are involved in energy production and prevention of cytotoxicity. Nutrients also contribute to the initiation and regulation of adaptive immune responses by modulating B and T lymphocyte differentiation, proliferation and activation, and antibody production. The purpose of this review is to present the available data from the field of nutritional immunology to elucidate the complex and dynamic relationship between nutrients and the immune system, the delineation of which will lead to optimized nutritional regimens for disease prevention and patient care.Entities:
Keywords: APC; GALT; antibodies; cytokines; lymphocytes; macronutrients; microbiota; micronutrients
Year: 2021 PMID: 34135894 PMCID: PMC8201077 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.665968
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Schematic representation of the interplay between nutrients, gut microbiota and immune system. The gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) occupies a large area of the gut; it is scattered within the intestinal epithelium and is also organized into lymphoid follicles in the lamina propria called Peyer’s patches. GALT consists mainly of B and T cells, macrophages, and dendritic cells (DCs). Enterocytes (Paneth cells, goblet cells, microfold (M) cells) are responsible for the active transport or passive diffusion of antigens from food during digestion and microbial components. M cells, located in Peyer’s patches, take up luminal antigens by transcytosis and present them to underlying DCs in the lamina propria, which in turn interact with B and T cells either in Peyer’s patches or in mesenteric lymph nodes. DCs secrete cytokines and induce differentiation of T helper cell precursors (Th0) into effector Th cells (Th1, Th2, Th17) or Tregs. Antigen impingement on intestinal epithelial cells and subsequent activation of DCs induces differentiation of B cells into IgA-secreting plasma cells. In parallel, nutrients modulate the gut microbiota by promoting or inhibiting its growth and affecting its ability to derive energy from dietary chemicals. Microbiota-derived metabolites (short-chain fatty acids, capsular polysaccharide A, lipopolysaccharides) stimulate and modulate DCs and macrophages to create an antigen presentation environment that favors the differentiation of Th0 cells into Th3 Tregs that inhibit T- and B-cell inflammatory responses triggered by food, commensal, and environmental antigens. Adapted from refs (6–16).
Effects of micronutrients on the immune system.
| Nutrient | Innate immunity | Adaptive immunity | Immunological outcome | Impact on health and disease | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Downregulation of expression and signaling of TLRs. | ATRA-RAR signaling affects T and B cell development, proliferation and differentiation, Ig class switching. | Universal stimulator of immunity. | Protection against infections. | ( | |
| ↓TLR4 and TNF-α. | B2 is implicated in metabolic pathways, involved in activation, differentiation and proliferation of T cells. | Antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activity. | Decreased serum levels of inflammatory markers in Crohn’s disease. | ( | |
| Deficiency associated with ↑TNF-α secretion by macrophages and ↓IL-6 levels. | Deficiency associated with ↓lymphocyte number, altered ratio of Th/Tc cells and suppressed NK activity. | Immunomodulation. | Control of inflammation (↓IL-8, TNF-α, ↑TGF-β) in | ( | |
| Blockade of NF-κB activation. | Promotion of B and T cell proliferation and differentiation. | Antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activity. | Maintenance of tissue epithelial barrier integrity, | ( | |
| ↑Chemotaxis, phagocytosis, expression of antimicrobial peptides by macrophages and monocytes. | Downregulation of IL-2, IFN-γ, IL-6, TNF-α and IL-17 expression in Th cells. | Immunomodulation. | Protection from acute respiratory infections. | ( | |
| ↓Migration of DCs, ↓IL-12 production, ↑activity of NK cells. | Enhancement of immunological synapse APC-T cell, T cell activation. | Regulation of cellular immunity. | Protection against infection. | ( | |
| ↓NK cell number and cytotoxicity. | Maintenance of Treg numbers in the colon. | Affects DNA synthesis and cell cycle, DNA methylation and regulation of gene expression → proper immune cell function. | Immune system homeostasis. | ( | |
| Inhibition of NF-κB→↓TLR4 signaling, IL-1β, TNF-α, IL-6 production. | Zinc deficiency → thymic atrophy, decreased number and activity of lymphocytes, oxidative stress. | Enhancement of innate immunity. | Reduction of inflammation in HIV. | ( | |
| Regulation of synthesis of inflammatory mediators. | ↑Th1 responses. | Enhancement of innate immunity. | Increase in antibody titers, improved vaccine effects. | ( | |
| Deficiency associated with ↓neutrophil numbers and antimicrobial function. | Deficiency associated with ↓T cell proliferation and ↓IL-2 secretion. | Enhancement of innate and adaptive immunity. | Energy production and prevention of oxidative stress in cells. | ( | |
| Iron homeostasis affects signaling and metabolic pathways relative to DNA synthesis and microbial killing. | Deficiency associated with ↓IgG levels. | Regulation of immune cell proliferation and innate immune response. | Strengthens immunity against infections. | ( |
Effects of macronutrients on the immune system.
| Nutrient | Innate immunity | Adaptive immunity | Immunological outcome | Impact on health and disease | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regulation of NK cell activation, macrophage activation, and cytokine and cytotoxic factor production. | Regulation of B and T cell activation, lymphocyte proliferation, and antibody and cytokine production. | Immunomodulation. | Robust immune responses. | ( | |
| Regulation of cell adhesion during leukocyte migration, recognition of carbohydrates in the membrane of pathogens → regulation of immunity to infection. | Influencing the binding of antigen presentation proteins (MHC-I/II), modulation of T cell recognition, activation of Th, Tc and NKT cells and cytokine production. | Immune recognition. | Robust immune responses. | ( | |
| Regulation of APC activation signaling. | Influencing immune cell function → energy source, cell membrane components, signaling molecules/gene expression. | Immune cell function. | Immune regulation (Th0 → Tregs) in multiple sclerosis/healthy subjects. | ( |