Abstract

Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis are idiopathic inflammatory bowel disorders. In this paper, we discuss how environmental factors (eg, geography, cigarette smoking, sanitation and hygiene), infectious microbes, ethnic origin, genetic susceptibility, and a dysregulated immune system can result in mucosal inflammation. After describing the symbiotic interaction of the commensal microbiota with the host, oral tolerance, epithelial barrier function, antigen recognition, and immunoregulation by the innate and adaptive immune system, we examine the initiating and perpetuating events of mucosal inflammation. We pay special attention to pattern-recognition receptors, such as toll-like receptors and nucleotide-binding-oligomerisation-domains (NOD), NOD-like receptors and their mutual interaction on epithelial cells and antigen-presenting cells. We also discuss the important role of dendritic cells in directing tolerance and immunity by modulation of subpopulations of effector T cells, regulatory T cells, Th17 cells, natural killer T cells, natural killer cells, and monocyte-macrophages in mucosal inflammation. Implications for novel therapies, which are discussed in detail in the second paper in this Series, are covered briefly.

Keywords

ImmunologyImmune systemInnate immune systemInflammationAcquired immune systemBiologyInflammatory bowel diseaseAntigenPattern recognition receptorReceptorDiseaseMedicineGeneticsPathology

MeSH Terms

Environmental ExposureGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseHumansImmune SystemInflammatory Bowel DiseasesIntestinesKaryotypingLife StyleNod Signaling Adaptor ProteinsPrevalenceRisk Factors

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Publication Info

Year
2007
Type
review
Volume
369
Issue
9573
Pages
1627-1640
Citations
2081
Access
Closed

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2081
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84
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1697
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Cite This

Daniel C. Baumgart, Simon R. Carding (2007). Inflammatory bowel disease: cause and immunobiology. The Lancet , 369 (9573) , 1627-1640. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(07)60750-8

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/s0140-6736(07)60750-8
PMID
17499605

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%