Effects of nutrition on disease and life span. I. Immune responses, cardiovascular pathology, and life span in MRL mice. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Mice of the autoimmune, lymphoproliferative strain MRL/lpr and the congenic, nonlymphoproliferative strain MRL/n were fed one of six diets from weaning on-ward. These mice were sacrificed at 3 or 5 months of age. Low fat diets resulted in lower cholesterol and higher triglyceride levels than did cholesterol-containing high-fat diets. Caloric restriction of MRL/lpr mice was associated with an increased plaque-forming cell response to trinitrophenylated polyacrylamide beads, less lymphoproliferation, and less severe glomerulonephritis. Diet did not affect the incidence of autoimmune vasculitis in MRL/lpr mice sacrificed at 5 months. MRL/lpr mice fed a low-fat, calorically restricted diet from 5 months of age to death lived longer than mice which were fed ad libitum a cholesterol-containing, high-fat diet. At death, MRL/lpr mice fed the former diet had the autoimmune vasculitis which had been evident in mice killed at 5 months, whereas mice fed the latter diet, in addition to the vasculitis, had a high incidence of atherosclerotic lesions of intrarenal and aortic branch arteries.

publication date

  • October 1, 1984

Research

keywords

  • Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
  • Autoimmune Diseases
  • Dietary Fats
  • Energy Intake
  • Glomerulonephritis
  • Longevity
  • Mice, Mutant Strains
  • Vasculitis

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC1900552

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0021739618

PubMed ID

  • 6333184

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 117

issue

  • 1