Department of Pathology, Microbiology & Immunology, School of Medicine, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29209, USA.
Cytokine. 2013 Oct;64(1):454-62. doi: 10.1016/j.cyto.2013.04.031. Epub 2013 Jun 2.
Many observational epidemiologic studies suggest an association between high-fat-diet (HFD) and colon cancer risk. However, the lack of controlled experimental studies that examine this relationship and the mechanisms involved weaken the basis for inferring a causal relationship. Inflammation plays a role in colon cancer progression and HFDs have been reported to increase inflammation; however, the inflammatory effects of HFD in colon cancer have yet to be firmly established. We examined the effects of a novel HFD that closely mimics the standard American diet (12% and 40% of total caloric intake from saturated fat and total fat, respectively) on macrophage markers and inflammatory mediators in a mouse model of intestinal tumorigenesis and relate this to polyp characteristics as well as measures of adiposity. Male Apc(Min/+) mice (7-8/group) were fed a Control Diet (Con) or novel high-fat-diet (HFD) from 4 to 12weeks of age. Body weight and body composition were measured weekly and monthly, respectively. Intestinal tissue was analyzed for polyp burden (number and size). Gene expression of macrophage markers and inflammatory mediators were examined in the adipose tissue and polyps. The HFD increased the expression of macrophage markers and inflammatory mediators in the adipose tissue (F4/80, CD11c, TLR-4 and MCP-1) and tumor microenvironment (IL-12, MCP-1, IL-6 and TNF-α). As expected, the HFD increased body weight, body fat percent, fat mass and blood glucose (P<0.05), and was associated with an increase in the number of large polyps (P<0.05) but not total polyps. In summary, consumption of a HFD, similar in macronutrient composition to the standard American diet, altered the expression of macrophage phenotypic markers and inflammatory mediators in adipose tissue and intestinal polyps and this was associated with increased tumorigenesis.
许多观察性流行病学研究表明高脂肪饮食(HFD)与结肠癌风险之间存在关联。然而,缺乏检查这种关系和涉及的机制的对照实验研究削弱了推断因果关系的基础。炎症在结肠癌的进展中起作用,高脂肪饮食已被报道会增加炎症;然而,高脂肪饮食在结肠癌中的炎症作用尚未得到证实。我们研究了一种新型 HFD 的影响,该饮食密切模仿标准美国饮食(饱和脂肪和总脂肪分别占总热量摄入的 12%和 40%)对肠道肿瘤发生小鼠模型中巨噬细胞标志物和炎症介质的影响,并将其与息肉特征以及肥胖程度的测量相关联。雄性 Apc(Min/+)小鼠(每组 7-8 只)从 4 至 12 周龄时分别喂食对照饮食(Con)或新型高脂肪饮食(HFD)。每周和每月测量体重和身体成分。分析肠道组织的息肉负担(数量和大小)。检查脂肪组织和息肉中巨噬细胞标志物和炎症介质的基因表达。HFD 增加了脂肪组织(F4/80、CD11c、TLR-4 和 MCP-1)和肿瘤微环境(IL-12、MCP-1、IL-6 和 TNF-α)中巨噬细胞标志物和炎症介质的表达。正如预期的那样,HFD 增加了体重、体脂肪百分比、脂肪量和血糖(P<0.05),并且与大息肉数量的增加有关(P<0.05),但与总息肉无关。总之,消耗类似于标准美国饮食的宏量营养素组成的 HFD 改变了脂肪组织和肠道息肉中巨噬细胞表型标志物和炎症介质的表达,并且与肿瘤发生增加有关。