Abstract

This study examined the effects of diet (chemically defined vs natural-ingredient), age, and microbial flora on the tumoricidal activity of natural killer (NK) cells from the spleens of mice. Results from a 4-h 51Cr-release assay indicate the following: Germfree C3H/HeCr mice raised on a chemically defined diet had significantly greater NK cell activity than their germfree or "clean-conventional" (i.e., barrier-maintained) counterparts who were raised on a sterilized natural-ingredient diet. The NK activity of germfree mice was dramatically increased after their alimentary tract was colonized with a complex intestinal flora. Conventional mice raised under clean (barrier) conditions had significantly less NK cell activity than nonbarrier-maintained mice. Switching germfree mice from a chemically defined diet to a sterile natural-ingredient diet did not enhance NK cell activity. No significant differences in NK activity were evident with C3H/HeCr mice of different (6-10 wk vs 29-36 wk) ages. These results indicate that diet and microbial flora can modulate the NK cell activity of mice.

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