| Literature DB >> 32223365 |
Rui Cai1, Chen Cheng1, Jianwei Chen2, Xiaoqiang Xu3, Chao Ding4,5, Bing Gu1,6.
Abstract
The intestinal mucosal barrier, which is composed of epithelial cells and mucus layers secreted by goblet cells and contains commensal bacteria, constitutes the first line of defense against pathogenic gut microbiota. However, homeostasis between the microbiota and mucus layer is easily disrupted by certain factors, resulting in alteration of the gut microbiota and entry of pathogens to the intestinal mucosal barrier. In this review, we describe the structures and functions of the mucus layer, expound several crucial influencing factors, including diet styles, medications and host genetics, and discuss how pathogenic microorganisms interact with the mucus layer and commensal microbiota, with the understanding that unraveling their complex interactions under homeostatic and dysbiosis conditions in the colon would help reveal some underlying pathogenic mechanisms and thus develop new strategies to prevent pathogenic microbiological colonization.Entities:
Keywords: Mucus layer; colonization resistance; commensalism; mucin; pathogen
Year: 2020 PMID: 32223365 PMCID: PMC7524288 DOI: 10.1080/19490976.2020.1735606
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut Microbes ISSN: 1949-0976