Diet switch pre-vaccination improves immune response and metabolic status in formerly obese mice.
Rebekah HonceAna Vazquez-PaganBrandi LivingstonAlexandra H MandaranoBenjamin A WilanderSean CherryVirginia HargestBridgett SharpPamela H BriglebEricka Kirkpatrick RoubidouxLee-Ann Van de VeldeR Chris SkinnerMaureen A McGargillPaul Glyndwr ThomasStacey Schultz-CherryPublished in: Nature microbiology (2024)
Metabolic disease is epidemiologically linked to severe complications upon influenza virus infection, thus vaccination is a priority in this high-risk population. Yet, vaccine responses are less effective in these same hosts. Here we examined how the timing of diet switching from a high-fat diet to a control diet affected influenza vaccine efficacy in diet-induced obese mice. Our results demonstrate that the systemic meta-inflammation generated by high-fat diet exposure limited T cell maturation to the memory compartment at the time of vaccination, impacting the recall of effector memory T cells upon viral challenge. This was not improved with a diet switch post-vaccination. However, the metabolic dysfunction of T cells was reversed if weight loss occurred 4 weeks before vaccination, restoring a functional recall response. This corresponded with changes in the systemic obesity-related biomarkers leptin and adiponectin, highlighting the systemic and specific effects of diet on influenza vaccine immunogenicity.
Keyphrases
- weight loss
- high fat diet
- insulin resistance
- bariatric surgery
- adipose tissue
- roux en y gastric bypass
- physical activity
- gastric bypass
- immune response
- metabolic syndrome
- oxidative stress
- type diabetes
- skeletal muscle
- working memory
- glycemic control
- risk factors
- obese patients
- high fat diet induced
- dendritic cells
- body mass index
- drug induced
- toll like receptor
- regulatory t cells
- type iii