Bacterial flora in inflammatory bowel disease

P Marteau - Digestive Diseases, 2009 - karger.com
P Marteau
Digestive Diseases, 2009karger.com
The pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) involves an interaction between host
susceptibility (which is partly genetically determined), mucosal immunity and the intestinal
milieu. Micro-organisms have physiological effects on mucosal structure, epithelial turnover,
the intestinal immune cells and, thus, on many intestinal functions. Tolllike receptors and
nucleotide oligomerisation-binding domain proteins in host cells recognise specific bacterial
molecules and modify the immune response. Human studies have repeatedly shown that …
Abstract
The pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) involves an interaction between host susceptibility (which is partly genetically determined), mucosal immunity and the intestinal milieu. Micro-organisms have physiological effects on mucosal structure, epithelial turnover, the intestinal immune cells and, thus, on many intestinal functions. Tolllike receptors and nucleotide oligomerisation-binding domain proteins in host cells recognise specific bacterial molecules and modify the immune response. Human studies have repeatedly shown that the microbiota of patients with IBD differs from that of controls and is unstable, both in the intestinal lumen and at the surface of the mucosa. A single pathogen has not been identified, but potentially pro-inflammatory micro-organisms have been found in samples from IBD patients more often than from healthy controls. These include Mycobacterium paratuberculosis, and enteroadherent and invasive Escherichia coliin Crohn’s disease (CD). Ecological descriptions of the microbiota present in patients with IBD (either in the faeces or adherent to the mucosa) have repeatedly reported a decrease in usually dominant bacteria, especially those from the dominant phylum Firmicutes. A decrease in the biodiversity of Firmicutes has
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