Moyes David L, Naglik Julian R
Department of Oral Immunology, King's College London Dental Institute, King's College London, Floor 28, Tower Wing, London SE1 9RT, UK.
Clin Dev Immunol. 2011;2011:346307. doi: 10.1155/2011/346307. Epub 2011 Jun 23.
Interactions between mucosal surfaces and microbial microbiota are key to host defense, health, and disease. These surfaces are exposed to high numbers of microbes and must be capable of distinguishing between those that are beneficial or avirulent and those that will invade and cause disease. Our understanding of the mechanisms involved in these discriminatory processes has recently begun to expand as new studies bring to light the importance of epithelial cells and novel immune cell subsets such as T(h)17 T cells in these processes. Elucidating how these mechanisms function will improve our understanding of many diverse diseases and improve our ability to treat patients suffering from these conditions. In our voyage to discover these mechanisms, mucosal interactions with opportunistic commensal organisms such as the fungus Candida albicans provide insights that are invaluable. Here, we review current knowledge of the interactions between C. albicans and epithelial surfaces and how this may shape our understanding of microbial-mucosal interactions.
黏膜表面与微生物群落之间的相互作用是宿主防御、健康和疾病的关键。这些表面暴露于大量微生物中,必须能够区分有益或无毒的微生物与那些会侵入并导致疾病的微生物。随着新研究揭示上皮细胞和新型免疫细胞亚群(如T(h)17 T细胞)在这些过程中的重要性,我们对这些鉴别过程所涉及机制的理解最近开始扩展。阐明这些机制如何发挥作用将增进我们对许多不同疾病的理解,并提高我们治疗患有这些疾病患者的能力。在我们探索这些机制的过程中,黏膜与机会性共生生物(如白色念珠菌)的相互作用提供了非常宝贵的见解。在这里,我们综述了目前关于白色念珠菌与上皮表面相互作用的知识,以及这如何塑造我们对微生物 - 黏膜相互作用的理解。