Dietary fatty acids influence the production of Th1- but not Th2-type cytokines
Dietary fatty acids influence the production of Th1- but not Th2-type cytokines
C57Bl6 mice were fed for 6 weeks on a low-fat diet or on high-fat diets containing coconut oil (rich in saturated fatty acids), safflower oil [rich in n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs)], or fish oil (rich in n-3 PUFAs) as the main fat sources. The fatty acid composition of the spleen lymphocytes was influenced by that of the diet fed. Thymidine incorporation into concanavalin A-stimulated spleen lymphocytes and interleukin (IL)-2 production were highest after feeding the coconut oil diet. Interferon (IFN)-? production was decreased by safflower oil or fish oil feeding. IL-4 production was not significantly affected by diet, although production was lowest by lymphocytes from fish oil-fed mice. The ratio of production of Th1- to Th2-type cytokines (determined as the IFN-?/IL-4 ratio) was lower for lymphocytes from mice fed the safflower oil or fish oil diets. After 4 h of culture, IL-2 mRNA levels were higher in cells from mice fed coconut oil, and IFN-? mRNA levels were higher in cells from mice fed coconut oil or safflower oil. After 8 h of culture, IL-2, IFN-?, and IL-4 mRNA levels were lowest in cells from mice fed fish oil. The ratio of the relative levels of IFN-? mRNA to IL-4 mRNA was highest in cells from mice fed coconut oil and was lowest in cells of mice fed fish oil. The influence of individual fatty acids on IL-2 production by murine spleen lymphocytes was examined in vitro. Although all fatty acids decreased IL-2 production in a concentration-dependent manner, saturated fatty acids were the least potent and n-3 PUFAs the most potent inhibitors, with n-6 PUFAs falling in between in terms of potency. It is concluded that saturated fatty acids have minimal effects on cytokine production. In contrast, PUFAs act to inhibit production of Th1-type cytokines with little effect on Th2-type cytokines; n-3 PUFAs are particularly potent. The effects of fatty acids on cytokine production appear to be exerted at the level of gene expression.
interleukin, interferon, lymphocyte, T-helper cell, fish oil, polyunsaturated fatty acid, mouse
449-457
Wallace, Fiona A.
8a124617-8ff3-47c6-871a-062bf331581b
Miles, Elizabeth A.
20332899-ecdb-4214-95bc-922dde36d416
Evans, Carl
17a14e9c-ca6c-4498-b757-5d65db73f06e
Stock, Theresa E.
5e1d64be-8cbf-4577-99c1-a98aee38b3e1
Yaqoob, Parveen
3a418e24-bbf0-4b31-9df8-ca8514885c82
Calder, Philip C.
1797e54f-378e-4dcb-80a4-3e30018f07a6
2001
Wallace, Fiona A.
8a124617-8ff3-47c6-871a-062bf331581b
Miles, Elizabeth A.
20332899-ecdb-4214-95bc-922dde36d416
Evans, Carl
17a14e9c-ca6c-4498-b757-5d65db73f06e
Stock, Theresa E.
5e1d64be-8cbf-4577-99c1-a98aee38b3e1
Yaqoob, Parveen
3a418e24-bbf0-4b31-9df8-ca8514885c82
Calder, Philip C.
1797e54f-378e-4dcb-80a4-3e30018f07a6
Wallace, Fiona A., Miles, Elizabeth A., Evans, Carl, Stock, Theresa E., Yaqoob, Parveen and Calder, Philip C.
(2001)
Dietary fatty acids influence the production of Th1- but not Th2-type cytokines.
Journal of Leukocyte Biology, 69 (3), .
Abstract
C57Bl6 mice were fed for 6 weeks on a low-fat diet or on high-fat diets containing coconut oil (rich in saturated fatty acids), safflower oil [rich in n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs)], or fish oil (rich in n-3 PUFAs) as the main fat sources. The fatty acid composition of the spleen lymphocytes was influenced by that of the diet fed. Thymidine incorporation into concanavalin A-stimulated spleen lymphocytes and interleukin (IL)-2 production were highest after feeding the coconut oil diet. Interferon (IFN)-? production was decreased by safflower oil or fish oil feeding. IL-4 production was not significantly affected by diet, although production was lowest by lymphocytes from fish oil-fed mice. The ratio of production of Th1- to Th2-type cytokines (determined as the IFN-?/IL-4 ratio) was lower for lymphocytes from mice fed the safflower oil or fish oil diets. After 4 h of culture, IL-2 mRNA levels were higher in cells from mice fed coconut oil, and IFN-? mRNA levels were higher in cells from mice fed coconut oil or safflower oil. After 8 h of culture, IL-2, IFN-?, and IL-4 mRNA levels were lowest in cells from mice fed fish oil. The ratio of the relative levels of IFN-? mRNA to IL-4 mRNA was highest in cells from mice fed coconut oil and was lowest in cells of mice fed fish oil. The influence of individual fatty acids on IL-2 production by murine spleen lymphocytes was examined in vitro. Although all fatty acids decreased IL-2 production in a concentration-dependent manner, saturated fatty acids were the least potent and n-3 PUFAs the most potent inhibitors, with n-6 PUFAs falling in between in terms of potency. It is concluded that saturated fatty acids have minimal effects on cytokine production. In contrast, PUFAs act to inhibit production of Th1-type cytokines with little effect on Th2-type cytokines; n-3 PUFAs are particularly potent. The effects of fatty acids on cytokine production appear to be exerted at the level of gene expression.
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Published date: 2001
Keywords:
interleukin, interferon, lymphocyte, T-helper cell, fish oil, polyunsaturated fatty acid, mouse
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Local EPrints ID: 26104
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/26104
ISSN: 0741-5400
PURE UUID: 584bbca9-2e89-44e3-a2cd-7731ee3f5539
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Date deposited: 12 Apr 2006
Last modified: 08 Jan 2022 02:42
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Author:
Fiona A. Wallace
Author:
Carl Evans
Author:
Theresa E. Stock
Author:
Parveen Yaqoob
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