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  3. Robust microbe immune recognition in the intestinal mucosa.
 

Robust microbe immune recognition in the intestinal mucosa.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/163850
Date of Publication
October 2021
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Infektio...

Contributor
Schären, Olivier Pascalorcid-logo
Institut für Infektionskrankheiten, Forschung
Hapfelmeier, Siegfried Hektororcid-logo
Institut für Infektionskrankheiten, Forschung
Subject(s)

500 - Science::570 - ...

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Genes and immunity
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1476-5470
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1038/s41435-021-00131-x
PubMed ID
33958733
Description
The mammalian mucosal immune system acts as a multitasking mediator between bodily function and a vast diversity of microbial colonists. Depending on host-microbial interaction type, mucosal immune responses have distinct functions. Immunity to pathogen infection functions to limit tissue damage, clear or contain primary infection, and prevent or lower the severity of a secondary infection by conferring specific long-term adaptive immunity. Responses to nonpathogenic commensal or mutualistic microbes instead function to tolerate continuous colonization. Mucosal innate immune and epithelial cells employ a limited repertoire of innate receptors to program the adaptive immune response accordingly. Pathogen versus nonpathogen immune discrimination appears to be very robust, as most individuals successfully maintain life-long mutualism with their nonpathogenic microbiota, while mounting immune defense to pathogenic microbe infection specifically. However, the process is imperfect, which can have immunopathological consequences, but may also be exploited medically. Normally innocuous intestinal commensals in some individuals may drive serious inflammatory autoimmunity, whereas harmless vaccines can be used to fool the immune system into mounting a protective anti-pathogen immune response. In this article, we review the current knowledge on mucosal intestinal bacterial immune recognition focusing on TH17 responses and identify commonalities between intestinal pathobiont and vaccine-induced TH17 responses.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/59556
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FileFile TypeFormatSizeLicensePublisher/Copright statementContent
s41435-021-00131-x.pdftextAdobe PDF690.74 KBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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