Enriched dietary saturated fatty acids induce trained immunity via ceramide production that enhances severity of endotoxemia and clearance of infection.
Amy L SeufertJames W HickmanSte K TraxlerRachael M PetersonTrent A WaughSydney J LashleyNatalia ShulzhenkoRuth J NapierBrooke A NapierPublished in: eLife (2022)
Trained immunity is an innate immune memory response that is induced by a primary inflammatory stimulus that sensitizes monocytes and macrophages to a secondary pathogenic challenge, reprogramming the host response to infection and inflammatory disease. Dietary fatty acids can act as inflammatory stimuli, but it is unknown if they can act as the primary stimuli to induce trained immunity. Here we find mice fed a diet enriched exclusively in saturated fatty acids (ketogenic diet; KD) confer a hyper-inflammatory response to systemic lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and increased mortality, independent of diet-induced microbiome and hyperglycemia. We find KD alters the composition of the hematopoietic stem cell compartment and enhances the response of bone marrow macrophages, monocytes, and splenocytes to secondary LPS challenge. Lipidomics identified enhanced free palmitic acid (PA) and PA-associated lipids in KD-fed mice serum. We found pre-treatment with physiologically relevant concentrations of PA induces a hyper-inflammatory response to LPS in macrophages, and this was dependent on the synthesis of ceramide. In vivo, we found systemic PA confers enhanced inflammation and mortality in response to systemic LPS, and this phenotype was not reversible for up to 7 days post-PA-exposure. Conversely, we find PA exposure enhanced clearance of <i>Candida albicans</i> in <i>Rag1</i><sup>-/-</sup> mice. Lastly, we show that oleic acid, which depletes intracellular ceramide, reverses PA-induced hyper-inflammation in macrophages and enhanced mortality in response to LPS<i>.</i> These implicate enriched dietary SFAs, and specifically PA, in the induction of long-lived innate immune memory and highlight the plasticity of this innate immune reprogramming by dietary constituents.
Keyphrases
- innate immune
- oxidative stress
- fatty acid
- inflammatory response
- candida albicans
- anti inflammatory
- bone marrow
- cardiovascular events
- diabetic rats
- risk factors
- mesenchymal stem cells
- toll like receptor
- resistance training
- lps induced
- metabolic syndrome
- dendritic cells
- working memory
- coronary artery disease
- signaling pathway
- peripheral blood
- cystic fibrosis
- skeletal muscle
- endothelial cells
- biofilm formation
- staphylococcus aureus
- stress induced