Tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF) production by peritoneal macrophages and its dietary modification were investigated by using rats fed on a low-protein diet. The rats were given a 20% casein (control) diet or a 3% casein diet for 21 days, and TNF production was measured in activated macrophages of these animals. TNF production was significantly lower in macrophages from rats fed on the low-protein diet than that in macrophages from rats fed on the control diet. Oral administration of a cabbage extract, a known modulator of TNF production, to the low-protein-diet-fed rats significantly enhanced TNF production by macrophages. Glutamine supplementation to the low-protein diet significantly enhanced TNF production as well as TNF mRNA expression. These results indicate that the 3%-casein-diet-fed rat would be useful as a model for reduced TNF production in protein malnutrition. These results also suggest that glutamine administration restored the reduced TNF production associated with protein malnutrition.
CITATION STYLE
Komatsu, W., Mawatari, K., Miura, Y., & Yagasaki, K. (2007). Restoration by dietary glutamine of reduced tumor necrosis factor production in a low-protein-diet-fed rat model. Bioscience, Biotechnology and Biochemistry, 71(2), 352–357. https://doi.org/10.1271/bbb.60271
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