Burnett School of Biomedical Sciences, College of Medicine, University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USA.
Adv Nutr. 2020 Jan 1;11(1):77-91. doi: 10.1093/advances/nmz061.
The intestinal tract is the largest barrier between a person and the environment. In this role, the intestinal tract is responsible not only for absorbing essential dietary nutrients, but also for protecting the host from a variety of ingested toxins and microbes. The intestinal barrier system is composed of a mucus layer, intestinal epithelial cells (IECs), tight junctions (TJs), immune cells, and a gut microbiota, which are all susceptible to external factors such as dietary fats. When components of this barrier system are disrupted, intestinal permeability to luminal contents increases, which is implicated in intestinal pathologies such as inflammatory bowel disease, necrotizing enterocolitis, and celiac disease. Currently, there is mounting evidence that consumption of excess dietary fats can enhance intestinal permeability differentially. For example, dietary fat modulates the expression and distribution of TJs, stimulates a shift to barrier-disrupting hydrophobic bile acids, and even induces IEC oxidative stress and apoptosis. In addition, a high-fat diet (HFD) enhances intestinal permeability directly by stimulating proinflammatory signaling cascades and indirectly via increasing barrier-disrupting cytokines [TNFα, interleukin (IL) 1B, IL6, and interferon γ (IFNγ)] and decreasing barrier-forming cytokines (IL10, IL17, and IL22). Finally, an HFD negatively modulates the intestinal mucus composition and enriches the gut microflora with barrier-disrupting species. Although further research is necessary to understand the precise role HFDs play in intestinal permeability, current data suggest a stronger link between diet and intestinal disease than was first thought to exist. Therefore, this review seeks to highlight the various ways an HFD disrupts the gut barrier system and its many implications in human health.
肠道是人体与环境之间最大的屏障。在这个角色中,肠道不仅负责吸收必需的膳食营养素,还保护宿主免受各种摄入的毒素和微生物的侵害。肠道屏障系统由黏液层、肠上皮细胞(IECs)、紧密连接(TJs)、免疫细胞和肠道微生物群组成,它们都容易受到膳食脂肪等外部因素的影响。当屏障系统的组成部分被破坏时,肠道对腔内容物的通透性增加,这与炎症性肠病、坏死性小肠结肠炎和乳糜泻等肠道疾病有关。目前有越来越多的证据表明,过量摄入膳食脂肪会导致肠道通透性的差异增加。例如,膳食脂肪调节 TJ 的表达和分布,刺激向破坏屏障的疏水性胆汁酸转移,甚至诱导 IEC 氧化应激和凋亡。此外,高脂肪饮食(HFD)通过刺激促炎信号级联反应直接增强肠道通透性,间接通过增加破坏屏障的细胞因子[TNFα、白细胞介素(IL)1B、IL6 和干扰素γ(IFNγ)]和减少形成屏障的细胞因子(IL10、IL17 和 IL22)。最后,HFD 负调控肠道黏液组成,并使破坏屏障的物种丰富肠道微生物群。尽管需要进一步研究来了解 HFD 在肠道通透性中的确切作用,但目前的数据表明,饮食与肠道疾病之间的联系比最初认为的更紧密。因此,本综述旨在强调 HFD 破坏肠道屏障系统的各种方式及其对人类健康的许多影响。