| Literature DB >> 30286447 |
Fozia Noor1, Anne Kaysen1, Paul Wilmes1, Jochen G Schneider2,3,4.
Abstract
The human gut microbiota gained tremendous importance in the last decade as next-generation technologies of sequencing and multiomics analyses linked the role of the microbial communities to host physiology and pathophysiology. A growing number of human pathologies and diseases are linked to the gut microbiota. One of the main mechanisms by which the microbiota influences the host is through its interactions with the host immune system. These interactions with both innate and adaptive host intestinal and extraintestinal immunity, although usually commensalistic even mutualistic with the host, in some cases lead to serious health effects. In the case of allogenic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT), the disruption of the intestinal microbiota diversity is associated with acute graft-versus-host disease (GvHD). Causing inflammation of the liver, skin, lungs, and the intestine, GvHD occurs in 40-50% of patients undergoing allo-HSCT and results in significant posttransplantation mortality. In this review, we highlight the impact of the gut microbiota on the host immunity in GvHD and the potential of microbiota in alleviation or even prevention of GvHD.Entities:
Keywords: Graft-versus-host disease; Gut microbiota; Immune system; Microbiome; Stem cell transplantation
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30286447 PMCID: PMC6738217 DOI: 10.1159/000492943
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Innate Immun ISSN: 1662-811X Impact factor: 7.349