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© Benoît Chassaing
Interaction microbiote-mucus à la surface de l’épithélium colique humain
Publication : Immunology letters

Linking genetic variation in human Toll-like receptor 5 genes to the gut microbiome’s potential to cause inflammation.

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Immunology letters - 01 Dec 2014

Leifer CA, McConkey C, Li S, Chassaing B, Gewirtz AT, Ley RE

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 25284610

Link to DOI – 10.1016/j.imlet.2014.07.017

Immunol Lett 2014 Dec; 162(2 Pt A): 3-9

Immunodeficiencies can lead to alterations of the gut microbiome that render it pathogenic and capable of transmitting disease to naïve hosts. Here, we review the role of Toll-like receptor (TLR) 5, the innate receptor for bacterial flagellin, in immune responses to the normal gut microbiota with a focus its role on adaptive immunity. Loss of TLR5 has profound effects on the microbiota that include greater temporal instability of major lineages and upregulation of flagellar motility genes that may be linked to the reduced levels of anti-flagellin antibodies in the TLR5(-/-) host. A variety of human TLR5 gene alleles exist that also associated with inflammatory conditions and may do so via effects on the gut microbiome and altered host-microbial crosstalk.