Improvement of hepatic innate immunity in chemically-injured livers to develop hepatocarcinoma by a serine type-protease inhibitors enriched extract from Chenopodium quinoa .
Maria Alicia Rueda HuélamoAlba Martínez PerladoValeria ConsoliAurora García-TejedorClaudia Monika HarosJose Moises Laparra LlopisPublished in: Food & function (2024)
Food ingredients have critical effects on the maturation and development of the immune system, which innate - lymphoid (ILCs) and myeloid - cells play key roles as important regulators of energy storage and hepatic fat accumulation. Therefore, the objective of this study is to define potential links between a dietary immunonutritional induction of the selective functional differentiation of monocytes-derived macrophages, ILCs and lipid homeostasis in hepatocarcinoma (HCC)-developing mice. Hepatic chemically injured (diethylnitrosamine/thiacetamide) Rag2 -/- and Rag2 -/- Il2 -/- mice were administered with serine-type protease inhibitors (SETIs) obtained from Chenopodium quinoa . Early HCC-driven immunometabolic imbalances (infiltrated macrophages, glucose homeostasis, hepatic lipid profile, ILCs expansion, inflammatory conditions, microbiota) in animals put under a high-fat diet for 2 weeks were assessed. It was also approached the potential of SETIs to cause functional adaptations of the bioenergetics of human macrophage-like cells (hMLCs) in vitro conditioning their capacity to accumulate fat. It is showed that Rag2 -/- Il2 -/- mice, lacking ILCs, are resistant to the SETIs-induced hepatic macrophages (CD68 + F4/80 + ) activation. Feeding SETIs to Rag2 -/- mice, carrying ILCs, promoted the expansion towards ILC3s (CD117 + Nkp46 + CD56 + ) and reduced that of ILC2s (CD117 + KLRG1 + ) into livers. In vitro studies demonstrate that hMLCs, challenged to SETIs, develop a similar phenotype of that found in mice and bioenergetic adaptations leading to increased lipolysis. It is concluded that SETIs promote liver macrophage activation and ILCs adaptations to ameliorate HCC-driven immunometabolic imbalances.
Keyphrases
- adipose tissue
- high fat diet
- high fat diet induced
- nk cells
- insulin resistance
- endothelial cells
- high intensity
- fatty acid
- wild type
- risk assessment
- acute myeloid leukemia
- dendritic cells
- type diabetes
- immune response
- climate change
- metabolic syndrome
- cell proliferation
- bone marrow
- high glucose
- weight loss
- human health
- cell death
- gestational age
- protein kinase
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- diabetic rats
- cell cycle arrest