| Literature DB >> 22114589 |
A G Miranda-Díaz1, H Alonso-Martínez, J Hernández-Ojeda, O Arias-Carvajal, A D Rodríguez-Carrizalez, L M Román-Pintos.
Abstract
Secondary obstructive cholangiopathy is characterized by intra- or extrahepatic bile tract obstruction. Liver inflammation and structural alterations develop due to progressive bile stagnation. Most frequent etiologies are biliary atresia in children, and hepatolithiasis, postcholecystectomy bile duct injury, and biliary primary cirrhosis in adults, which causes chronic biliary cholangitis. Bile ectasia predisposes to multiple pathogens: viral infections in biliary atresia; Gram-positive and/or Gram-negative bacteria cholangitis found in hepatolithiasis and postcholecystectomy bile duct injury. Transmembrane toll-like receptors (TLRs) are activated by virus, bacteria, fungi, and parasite stimuli. Even though TLR-2 and TLR-4 are the most studied receptors related to liver infectious diseases, other TLRs play an important role in response to microorganism damage. Acquired immune response is not vertically transmitted and reflects the infectious diseases history of individuals; in contrast, innate immunity is based on antigen recognition by specific receptors designated as pattern recognition receptors and is transmitted vertically through the germ cells. Understanding the mechanisms for bile duct inflammation is essential for the future development of therapeutic alternatives in order to avoid immune-mediated destruction on secondary obstructive cholangiopathy. The role of TLRs in biliary atresia, hepatolithiasis, bile duct injury, and primary biliary cirrhosis is described in this paper.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22114589 PMCID: PMC3205723 DOI: 10.1155/2011/265093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gastroenterol Res Pract ISSN: 1687-6121 Impact factor: 2.260
Toll-like receptor(TRLs) characteristics. Some TLRs recognize proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids from RNA or DNA of pathogens by inducing innate immune response. Stimulation of TLRs starts with the activation of intracellular signals resulting in secretion of proinflammatory cytokines such as type 1 IFN, TNF-α, and IL-6 depending on the causal agent.
| Location | Function | Stimulates | Inhibits or interferes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toll-like receptor (TLR) | (i) Transmembrane receptors expressed in most immune cells including polymorphonuclear and epithelial cells | (i) Induction of phagocytosis, opsonization, and production of inflammatory mediators, | (i) Innate and adaptive inflammatory response | (i) The spread of the pathogen |
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| TLR-1 | (i) Expressed on the surface of all cells at high levels | (i) Recognition of PAMP from Gram-positive bacteria | (i) Heterodimers increasing the specificity of their ligands | (i) Phenol-soluble modulin |
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| TLR-2 | (i) Expressed on cell membranes surface | (i) Lipid transport through lipoproteins uptake | (i) Requires the presence of leucine-rich cofactors such as CD14 | (i) Deficiency protects from nonalcoholic fatty liver disease |
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| TLR-3 | (i) Intracellular expression on endosomes of myeloid DCs | (i) Reaction to dsRNA from viruses and apoptotic and/or necrotic cells | (i) Type I IFN production during viral infections and NF- | (i) Antagonist |
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| TLR-4 | (i) Expressed on all cell surface | (i) First to respond to LPS ligand | (i) IRAK-M | (i) IRAK-1, MyD88, and NF- |
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| TLR-5 | (i) Expressed on all cell surface | (i) Recognition of bacterial flagellin protein of | (i) Initiation or amplification of Th2-type | (i) I- |
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| TLR-6 | (i) Expressed in myeloid and monocyte-derived dendritic cells (DCs) | (i) Recognition of | (i) Specificity of ligands from TLR-1, TLR-2, and TLR-10 | (i) Antagonist |
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| TLR-7 | (i) Expressed on endosome of dendritic cells, human plasmacytoid cells, myeloid cells, and monocyte-derived cells | (i) Recognition of imidazoquinolines | (i) Type I IFN production during viral infections | (i) Antagonists |
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| TLR-8 | (i) Intracellular expression | (i) Detection of pathogen-derived nucleic acids (ssRNA) | (i) Type I IFN MyD88-dependent | (i) Antagonists |
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| TLR-9 | (i) Intracellular expression | (i) Recognition of bacterial DNA with unmethylated motifs | (i) Type I IFN | (i) Antagonists |
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| TLR-10 | (i) TLR2/1, TLR2/10 complexes recruit the proximal adaptor MyD88 | (i) Receptor complex requires TLR-2 for innate immune recognition | (i) Proximal adaptor MyD88 to the activated receptor complex | (i) TLR-induced signaling, including NF- |
Figure 1Toll-like receptors on secondary obstructive cholangiopathies.