Very‐low‐carbohydrate diet enhances human T‐cell immunity through immunometabolic reprogramming

Abstract Very‐low‐carbohydrate diet triggers the endogenous production of ketone bodies as alternative energy substrates. There are as yet unproven assumptions that ketone bodies positively affect human immunity. We have investigated this topic in an in vitro model using primary human T cells and in...

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Main Authors: Simon Hirschberger, Gabriele Strauß, David Effinger, Xaver Marstaller, Alicia Ferstl, Martin B Müller, Tingting Wu, Max Hübner, Tim Rahmel, Hannah Mascolo, Nicole Exner, Julia Heß, Friedrich W Kreth, Kristian Unger, Simone Kreth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2021-06-01
Series:EMBO Molecular Medicine
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.15252/emmm.202114323
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Summary:Abstract Very‐low‐carbohydrate diet triggers the endogenous production of ketone bodies as alternative energy substrates. There are as yet unproven assumptions that ketone bodies positively affect human immunity. We have investigated this topic in an in vitro model using primary human T cells and in an immuno‐nutritional intervention study enrolling healthy volunteers. We show that ketone bodies profoundly impact human T‐cell responses. CD4+, CD8+, and regulatory T‐cell capacity were markedly enhanced, and T memory cell formation was augmented. RNAseq and functional metabolic analyses revealed a fundamental immunometabolic reprogramming in response to ketones favoring mitochondrial oxidative metabolism. This confers superior respiratory reserve, cellular energy supply, and reactive oxygen species signaling. Our data suggest a very‐low‐carbohydrate diet as a clinical tool to improve human T‐cell immunity. Rethinking the value of nutrition and dietary interventions in modern medicine is required.
ISSN:1757-4676
1757-4684