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Diet and Ethanol Modulate Immune Responses in Young C57BL/6 Mice
Authors:Bernhard Watzl  Maria Lopez  Masoud Shahbazian  Guanjie Chen  Lucas L. Colombo  Dennis Huang  Dennis Way  Ronald R. Watson
Affiliation:Alcohol Research Center, Department of Family and Community Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona.;Alcohol Research Center, Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona.
Abstract:Chronic ethanol (ETOH) ingestion adversely affects the immunocompetence of alcohol abusers. ETOH directly impairs host defense mechanisms and indirectly modulates immunocompetence by interfering with the nutritional status of the alcoholic. It is not clear from the current literature, however, to what extent ETOH, nutritional status, or the combination of the two factors modulates immune mechanisms in chronic alcoholics. To date, most animal studies investigating the immunotoxicity of ETOH have neglected the dietary factors, which may have masked additional immunotoxic effects of ETOH. To examine these dietary factors, we fed mice three liquid ETOH diets with different dietary sufficiencies for 7 weeks and investigated various immune responses. Spleen cell number and secretions of immunoreactive interleukin-2 and tumor necrosis factor were totally independent of the diet, being affected only by ETOH. Body, spleen, and thymus weights, interferon-γ secretion, and natural killer cell and phagocytic activities were modulated by ETOH as well as by diet. Natural killer cell and phagocytic activities were also directly affected by the nutritional quality of the diet. These results suggest that animal diets used in experimental studies of ETOH-induced immunomodulation must be planned and controlled carefully in order to single out the direct effects that ETOH has on the host defense system.
Keywords:Ethanol    dNutritional Status    dAnimal Diets    dImmunocompetence    dMice
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