Publicaties
Single high-fat challenge and trained innate immunity : A randomized controlled cross-over trial
van Tuijl, Julia; van Heck, Julia I.P.; Bahrar, Harsh; Broeders, Wieteke; Wijma, Johan; ten Have, Yvonne M.; Giera, Martin; Zweers-van Essen, Heidi; Rodwell, Laura; Joosten, Leo A.B.; Netea, Mihai G.; Afman, Lydia A.; Bekkering, Siroon; Riksen, Niels P.
Samenvatting
Brief exposure of monocytes to atherogenic molecules, such as oxidized lipoproteins, triggers a persistent pro-inflammatory phenotype, named trained immunity. In mice, transient high-fat diet leads to trained immunity, which aggravates atherogenesis. We hypothesized that a single high-fat challenge in humans induces trained immunity. In a randomized controlled cross-over study, 14 healthy individuals received a high-fat or reference shake, and blood was drawn before and after 1, 2, 4, 6, 24, and 72 h. Incubation of donor monocytes with the post-high-fat-shake serum induced trained immunity, regulated via Toll-like receptor 4. This was not mediated via triglyceride-rich lipoproteins, C12, 14, and 16, or metabolic endotoxemia. In vivo, however, the high-fat challenge did not affect monocyte phenotype and function. We conclude that a high-fat challenge leads to alterations in the serum composition that have the potential to induce trained immunity in vitro. However, this does not translate into a (persistent) hyperinflammatory monocyte phenotype in vivo.