Zhao Qing, Maynard Craig L
Department of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, 35294, USA.
Department of Pathology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, 35294, USA.
Gut Microbes. 2022 Jan-Dec;14(1):2041342. doi: 10.1080/19490976.2022.2041342.
The immune system in the large intestine is separated from commensal microbes and comparatively rare enteric pathogens by a monolayer of diverse epithelial cells overlaid with a compact and adherent inner mucus layer and a looser outer mucus layer. Microorganisms, collectively referred to as the mucus-associated (MA) microbiota, physically inhabit this mucus barrier, resulting in a dynamic and incessant dialog to maintain both spatial segregation and immune tolerance. Recent major findings reveal novel features of the crosstalk between the immune system and mucus-associated bacteria in health and disease, as well as disease-related peripheral immune signatures indicative of host responses to these organisms. In this brief review, we integrate these novel observations into our overall understanding of host-microbiota mutualism at the colonic mucosal border and speculate on the significance of this emerging knowledge for our understanding of the prevention, development, and progression of chronic intestinal inflammation.
大肠中的免疫系统通过一层由多种上皮细胞构成的单层结构与共生微生物以及相对罕见的肠道病原体分隔开来,这层结构上覆盖着致密且附着的内层黏液层和较松散的外层黏液层。微生物,统称为黏液相关(MA)微生物群,实际栖息于这层黏液屏障中,从而形成动态且持续不断的对话,以维持空间隔离和免疫耐受。最近的重大发现揭示了健康和疾病状态下免疫系统与黏液相关细菌之间相互作用的新特征,以及表明宿主对这些微生物反应的疾病相关外周免疫特征。在这篇简短的综述中,我们将这些新观察结果整合到我们对结肠黏膜边界处宿主-微生物群共生关系的整体理解中,并推测这一新兴知识对于我们理解慢性肠道炎症的预防、发展和进展的意义。