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Number of results
2008 | 56 | 4 | 237-244

Article title

Abnormalities in the handling of intracellular bacteria in Crohn's disease: a link between infectious etiology and host genetic susceptibility

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
The etiology of Crohn's disease (CD) is still poorly understood, but recent advances have highlighted the importance of the innate immune system and the critical relationship between the gut flora and the intestinal mucosa. Several combinations of genetic factors predisposing to CD have been described, with the most significant replicable associations including genes for intracellular receptors of bacterial cell walls (NOD2/CARD15) and for bacterial clearance and antigen processing via autophagy (ATG16L1 and IRGM). One theoretical link between susceptibility genes NOD2/CARD15, ATG16L1, and IRGM is that CD is primarily induced by the presence of a dysfunctional immunological response to persistent infection by intracellular bacterial pathogens such as Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis or adherent-invasive Escherichia coli, both first-rank candidates on the basis of host genetic susceptibility, which concerns impaired functions in the defense against intracellular bacteria.

Contributors

References

Document Type

REVIEW

Publication order reference

Arlette Darfeuille-Michaud, Pathogenie Bactrienne Intestinale, Laboratoire de Bacteriologie, CBRV, 28 place Henri Dunant, 63000 Clermont-Ferrand, France

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.element-from-psjc-084dbec3-b9dd-341e-8ff1-2b600b4e4fe2
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