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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Mend Your Fences: The Epithelial Barrier and its Relationship With Mucosal Immunity in Inflammatory Bowel Disease

TLDR
This review summarizes the important cellular and molecular barrier components of the intestinal epithelium and emphasizes the mechanisms leading to barrier dysfunction during intestinal inflammation.
Abstract
The intestinal epithelium can be easily disrupted during gut inflammation as seen in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), such as ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease. For a long time, research into the pathophysiology of IBD has been focused on immune cell-mediated mechanisms. Recent evidence, however, suggests that the intestinal epithelium might play a major role in the development and perpetuation of IBD. It is now clear that IBD can be triggered by disturbances in epithelial barrier integrity via dysfunctions in intestinal epithelial cell-intrinsic molecular circuits that control the homeostasis, renewal, and repair of intestinal epithelial cells. The intestinal epithelium in the healthy individual represents a semi-permeable physical barrier shielding the interior of the body from invasions of pathogens on the one hand and allowing selective passage of nutrients on the other hand. However, the intestinal epithelium must be considered much more than a simple physical barrier. Instead, the epithelium is a highly dynamic tissue that responds to a plenitude of signals including the intestinal microbiota and signals from the immune system. This epithelial response to these signals regulates barrier function, the composition of the microbiota, and mucosal immune homeostasis within the lamina propria. The epithelium can thus be regarded as a translator between the microbiota and the immune system and aberrant signal transduction between the epithelium and adjacent immune cells might promote immune dysregulation in IBD. This review summarizes the important cellular and molecular barrier components of the intestinal epithelium and emphasizes the mechanisms leading to barrier dysfunction during intestinal inflammation.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Special Issue on the “Regulation and Physiopathology of the Gut Barrier”

TL;DR: The importance of gut barrier integrity in intestinal homeostasis and the consequences of its alteration in the etiology of human pathologies have been subjects of exponentially growing interest during the last decade.
Journal ArticleDOI

Discovery of NXT-10796, an orally active, intestinally restricted EP4 agonist prodrug for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease.

TL;DR: In this article , a property-focused optimization strategy was employed to modify the carboxylic acid head group of a class of EP4 agonists in order to minimize its absorption upon oral administration.
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Saccharomyces boulardii protects against murine experimental colitis by reshaping the gut microbiome and its metabolic profile

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors tested whether S. boulardii targets the gut microbiota to protect against the development of experimental colitis in mice and found that supplementing the colon microbiota with S.boulardi significantly prevented weight loss and colon shortening, lowered colonic inflammation, ameliorated epithelial injury, and enhanced the intestinal barrier integrity in colitis mice.
Journal ArticleDOI

The ACE2 activator diminazene aceturate ameliorates colitis by repairing the gut-vascular barrier in mice.

TL;DR: In this article , the effects of diminazene aceturate (DIZE), an ACE2 activator, on vascular barrier damage in colitis were investigated. But their role in improving the gut-vascular barrier (GVB) has rarely been reported.
References
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Identification of stem cells in small intestine and colon by marker gene Lgr5

TL;DR: The expression pattern of Lgr5 suggests that it marks stem cells in multiple adult tissues and cancers, suggesting that it represents the stem cell of the small intestine and colon.
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A frameshift mutation in NOD2 associated with susceptibility to Crohn's disease

TL;DR: It is shown that a frameshift mutation caused by a cytosine insertion, 3020insC, which is expected to encode a truncated NOD2 protein, is associated with Crohn's disease, and a link between an innate immune response to bacterial components and development of disease is suggested.
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The Nuclear Factor NF-κB Pathway in Inflammation

TL;DR: How genetic evidence in mice has revealed complex roles for the NF-kappaB in inflammation that suggest both pro- and anti-inflammatory roles for this pathway is described.
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Defensins: antimicrobial peptides of innate immunity.

TL;DR: This review, inspired by a spate of recent studies ofdefensins in human diseases and animal models, focuses on the biological function of defensins.
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