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Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether consuming mushrooms is effective in enhancing the function of γδ T cells.


Clinical Trial Description

A non-therapeutic study is described. This is an intervention study at two levels of mushroom intake. The number of subjects and experimental assays are selected as a pilot study to generate the dose level and the efficacy. Subjects age 21 to 50 will be recruited and provide a baseline blood draw. The mushroom supplementation will occur for 4 weeks at two levels 85 g (3 ounces) and 170 g (6 ounces). Immunity changes fairly rapidly; in and early study the investigators saw changes in as little as 3 days. Blood is taken again at 4 weeks. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells are isolated from the blood and used freshly isolated, or cultured in autologous serum for 24 hours or for 10 days. Freshly isolated cells will be used to count γδ T cell and NK cells baseline values. After 24 hours of stimulation with a broad based mitogen, culture medium is harvested and assayed for cytokines secreted into the culture medium as well as NK cell activation and proliferation. Finally, cells are harvested after 10 days and assayed for γδ T cell activation and proliferation.

Consumers will benefit from knowing that health benefits can be derived from mushrooms. Potentially, this will stimulate mushroom sales and increase the variety of mushrooms consumed.

γδ T cells reside in epithelial linings of the lung, gut and reproductive tract and although their number is not precisely known, they are in much greater numbers than the circulating αβ T cells. γδ T cells are not activated in the same way as the αβ cells, they are activated more like cells of the innate immune system, by recognition of pathogen-associated molecular patterns (1,2). Recognition of pathogen-associated molecular patterns is rather non-specific, but very effective. For example, prenyl phosphate is a molecule having a pattern that is recognized by receptors of the γδ T cells. Interaction of prenyl phosphate with the γδ T cell receptor results in γδ T cell proliferation; expression of cell surface activation markers, such as cytokine receptors; and lastly, synthesis and secretion of cytokines necessary for communicating with other branches of the immune system. The investigators hypothesize that consuming mushrooms will result in greater proliferation when stimulated and will also enhance their capacity for activation, defined here as cytokine secretion and cell surface marker expression.

A second quality of γδ T cells is their ability to turn off the immune response once it is no longer needed. Carding and Egan (3,4) showed that γδ T cells were responsible for killing activated macrophages after the pathogen had been eliminated. Knockout mouse models show that the elimination of γδ cells promote chronic inflammation, prevent wound healing (5) and may increase the risk for cancer (6,7). The magnitude and the importance of the γδ T cell are just being realized. By strengthening γδ T cells, the investigators will fight pathogen better and resolve inflammation quicker.

It is our hypothesis that there are certain bioactive components that resemble pathogen-associated molecular patterns and interact weakly with the epithelial γδ T cells in such a way that they are "primed", but not activated. The bioactive food components do not interact with the cells with enough strength to cause an actual response, but, later, when the cells do encounter pathogen, they can react quicker and with more intensity if they have already been primed. The primary bioactive components in mushrooms that may interact with immune cells are polysaccharides and glycoproteins and the two major types of mushroom polysaccharides include glucans (both β and α) and heteroglycans. Additionally, mushrooms contain another important polysaccharide, chitin. Chitin is composed of N-acetyl-d-glucosamine units (8,9). These compounds are some likely candidates, in addition to other immuno-modulating compounds such as Vitamin D (10) and B vitamins.

Mushrooms have been shown to have an impact on immune cells, particularly NK cells (11,12) but the γδ T cell has not been studied. The composition of mushroom is well suited to interact with the γδ T cell. NK cell activity will be used in this study as a positive control although the investigators will use flow cytometry rather than generalized non-specific cytolytic activity.

The investigators know from our previous studies in humans (7,13,14) and from other published studies (15,16) that foods such as tea, apples, encapsulated fruits and vegetables contain compounds that appear to prime γδ T cells. The investigators hypothesize that bioactive compounds in the gut are recognized by intestinal γδ T cells, resulting in a primed cell. These cells are not static but migrate in and out of tissues, through the circulation as well as lymph nodes (17). Thus, the investigators can measure functional changes in the blood borne γδ T cells regardless of whether the bioactive compound is absorbed or not.

This study will specifically study the shiitake (Lentinus edodes) mushroom. This mushroom has been shown in other research to have a variety of health benefits, but few feeding trials, and none in healthy humans, has been done (18-20).

5. Specific Aims:

The aim is to determine if bioactive compounds in mushroom can enhance the activity of this cell type. Because this cell type resides in the epithelial linings and migrates via the blood and lymph system, the investigators can measure functional changes in this cell regardless of whether bioactive compounds are absorbed or not. It is often describe as the first line of defense. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Basic Science


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01398176
Study type Interventional
Source University of Florida
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date October 2011
Completion date December 2012

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