CERELA   05438
CENTRO DE REFERENCIA PARA LACTOBACILOS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
“Proposed model: mechanisms of immunomodulation induced by probiotic bacteria”
Autor/es:
MALDONADO GALDEANO, CAROLINA; DE MORENO DE LEBLANC, ALEJANDRA; VINDEROLA, GABRIEL; BIBAS BONET, EUGENIA; PERDIGÓN, GABRIELA
Revista:
Clinical and Vaccine Immunology
Editorial:
American Society for Microbiology
Referencias:
Año: 2007 vol. 14 p. 485 - 492
ISSN:
1556-6811
Resumen:
The mammalian microbiota comprises several hundred different bacterial species many of which have a beneficial effect on the host. For example they are involved in preventing colonization of the gut by pathogens and maintaining the gut mucosal immunity (85). The gut microbiota is more abundant in the large intestine of mammals, with densities rising to over 1011 organisms/g intestinal contents (84, 86). The number of bacterial cells in the entire gut exceeds the number of eukaryotic cells in the host, but under normal circumstance they coexist without any adverse effect on the host. The influence of the resident microflora on mucosal immune function and gut health has become an area of scientifical and clinical importance (22, 26). There is an active dialogue between the commensal microorganisms and the host mucosal immune system (21, 48). This crosstalk elicits different host responses to commensal and pathogenic bacteria. Commensal bacteria may even share molecular patterns recognized by toll-like receptors, which can recognize patterns associated mainly with pathogens. However, the mucosal immune system of the healthy intestine allows the persistence of this microbiota associated to the intestine and avoids immunological tolerance and maintaining the intestinal homeostasis. Now there is acceptance of the concept that oral tolerance is not generated by commensal intestinal bacteria; the host would ignore or fail to recognize the presence of indigenous microorganisms (49). The healthy host is able to elicit a good mucosal immune response against luminal antigens and to maintain a "physiological state of inflammation" in the gut, but it is also capable of responding to invading commensal organisms or pathogens. In the healthy host the penetration of the commensal bacteria is usually prevented by the barrier afforded by the intestinal epithelium and the immune cells associated with mucosa which are highly adapted to the presence of the normal microbiota (71). The signals sent by these microorganisms prevent their penetration and maintains them outside the intestinal tissue. If the commensal microorganisms invade the host tissues, the innate immune mechanisms contribute to their rapid clearance, but when pathogens enter the intestine, innate and adaptative mechanisms are coordinately stimulated to respond the danger signals (38, 60). Although mucosal epithelial tissues form an efficient barrier that prevents the entrance of the environmental pathogens and the external antigens into the host internal milieu, mucosal tissues represent the main sites of infection by pathogens. Many attempts have been made to understand the gut immunomodulation by pathogenic bacteria, but not the mechanisms involved in the modulation of the gut immune system by commensal bacteria and by non-pathogenic microorganisms present in many foods included in the daily diet.