Interaction of Mucosal Microbiota with the Innate Immune System

Organisms live in continuos interaction with their environment; this interaction is of vital importance but at the same time can be life threatening. The largest and most important interface between the organism and its environment is represented by surfaces covered with epithelial cells. Of these s...

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Published inScandinavian journal of immunology Vol. 62; no. s1; pp. 106 - 113
Main Authors Tlaskalova‐Hogenova, H., Tuckova, L., Mestecky, J., Kolinska, J., Rossmann, P., Stepankova, R., Kozakova, H., Hudcovic, T., Hrncir, T., Frolova, L., Kverka, M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK; Malden, USA Blackwell Publishing Ltd/Inc 01.07.2005
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
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Summary:Organisms live in continuos interaction with their environment; this interaction is of vital importance but at the same time can be life threatening. The largest and most important interface between the organism and its environment is represented by surfaces covered with epithelial cells. Of these surfaces, mucosae comprise in humans approximately 300 m2, and the skin covers approximately 1.8 m2 surface of the human body. Mucosal tissues contain two effector arms of the immune system, innate and adaptive, which operate in synergy. Interaction with commensal bacteria, which outnumber the nucleated cells of our body, occurs physiologically on epithelial surfaces; this interaction could pose the risk of inflammation. The mucosal immune system has developed a complex network of regulatory signalling cascades that is a prerequisite for proper activation but also for a timely inactivation of the pathway. As demonstrated in gnotobiotic animal models of human diseases, impaired regulation of mucosal responses to commensal bacteria plays an important role in the development of several inflammatory and autoimmune diseases.
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ISSN:0300-9475
1365-3083
DOI:10.1111/j.1365-3083.2005.01618.x