4.6 Article

The Impact of High-Fat Diet and Restrictive Feeding on Natural Killer Cells in Obese-Resistant BALB/c Mice

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NUTRITION
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2021.711824

Keywords

NK cells; overweight; obesity; cytotoxicity; NK cell receptors; NK cell subsets; cancer; BALB/c

Funding

  1. Wilhelm-Roux grant of the Medical Faculty of the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg [FKZ 31/01]
  2. SFI (CURAM Research Centre) [13/RC/2073]
  3. European Regional Development Fund
  4. Dr. Werner Jackstadt-Stiftung
  5. Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg

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This study found that ad libitum feeding of a high-fat diet in BALB/c mice does not affect body weight gain, visceral fat mass, plasma cytokine concentrations, immune cell populations, or the number, frequency, and phenotype of NK cells. However, compared to a normal-fat diet, restrictive feeding of a high-fat diet leads to significantly higher body weights, visceral fat mass, and plasma interferon-gamma concentrations, as well as changes in the frequencies of granulocytes and NK cell subsets, and in the surface expression of NK cell maturation markers.
Background: The association of obesity and an increased risk for severe infections and various cancer types is well-described. Natural killer (NK) cells are circulating lymphoid cells and promoters of the immune response toward viruses and malignant cells. As demonstrated in previous studies the phenotype and functionality of NK cells is impaired in obesity. So far, the majority of animal studies were exclusively performed using ad libitum feeding regimes and it remained unclear whether NK cell alterations are mediated by obesity-associated immunological changes or by direct effects of the dietary composition. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to characterize NK cells in the peripheral blood of obese-resistant BALB/c mice supplied a normal-fat diet (NFD) or high-fat diet (HFD), ad libitum or in a restrictive manner. Methods: Twenty-eight BALB/c-mice were fed a NFD or HFD either ad libitum or in a restrictive feeding regime with 90% of the mean daily diet supply of the corresponding ad libitum group (each group n = 7). Blood and visceral adipose tissue were collected for flow cytometric analysis, analysis of plasma cytokine concentrations by multiplex immunoassay and real-time RT-PCR analyses. For statistical analyses two-way ANOVA with the factors feeding regime and diet was performed followed by a post-hoc Tukey's multiple comparison test and to compare means of the four mouse groups. Results: Ad libitum-feeding of a HFD in BALB/c mice has no influence on body weight gain, visceral fat mass, plasma cytokine concentrations, immune cell populations as well as the number, frequency and phenotype of NK cells. In contrast, restrictive feeding of a HFD compared to NFD led to significantly higher body weights, visceral fat mass and plasma interferon-gamma concentrations which was associated with changes in the frequencies of granulocytes and NK cell subsets as well as in the surface expression of NK cell maturation markers. Conclusion: Results demonstrate for the first time that HFD-induced alterations in NK cells are consequences of the obese associated immunological profile rather than a direct effect of the dietary composition. These data can help to clarify the increased risk for cancer and severe infections in obesity.

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