Abstract
AIM
To characterize the influence of diet-induced changes in body fat on colitis severity in SMAD3-/- mice.
METHODS
SMAD3-/- mice (6-8 wk of age) were randomly assigned to receive a calorie restricted (30% of control; CR), control (CON),
or high fat (HF) diet for 20 wk and were gavaged with sterile broth or with Helicobacter hepaticus (H. hepaticus) to induce
colitis. Four weeks after infection, mice were sacrificed and the cecum and colons were processed for histological evaluation.
RESULTS
Dietary treatment significantly influenced body composition prior to infection (P < 0.05), with CR mice having less (14% ±
2%) and HF-fed mice more body fat (32% ± 7%) compared to controls (22% ± 4%). Differences in body composition were associated
with alterations in plasma levels of leptin (HF > CON > CR) and adiponectin (CON > HF ≥ CR) (P < 0.05). There were no significant
differences in colitis scores between CON and HF-fed mice 4 wk post-infection. Consistent with this, differences in proliferation
and inflammation markers (COX-2, iNOS), and infiltrating cell types (CD3+ T lymphocytes, macrophages) were not observed. Unexpectedly,
only 40% of CR mice survived infection with H. hepaticus, with mortality observed as early as 1 wk following induction of
colitis.
CONCLUSION
Increased adiposity does not influence colitis severity in SMAD3-/- mice. Importantly, caloric restriction negatively impacts
survival following pathogen challenge, potentially due to an impaired immune response.
Links
Authors
McCaskey SJ, Rondini EA, Langohr IM, Fenton JI
Institution
Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA.
Source
World journal of gastroenterology : WJG 18:7 2012 Feb 21 pg 627-36MeSH
AdipokinesAdiposity
Animals
Biological Markers
Body Weight
Caloric Restriction
Colitis
Diet, High-Fat
Energy Metabolism
Female
Inflammation
Male
Mice
Mice, Knockout
Random Allocation
Smad3 Protein
Survival Rate
Pub Type(s)
Journal ArticleLanguage
eng
PubMed ID
22363133
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