Litcius/Paper detail

Selective Interferon Responses of Intestinal Epithelial Cells Minimize Tumor Necrosis Factor Alpha Cytotoxicity

Jacob A. Van Winkle, David A. Constant, Lena Li, Timothy J. Nice

2020Journal of Virology44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Enteric viral infections are a major cause of gastroenteritis worldwide and have the potential to trigger or exacerbate intestinal inflammatory diseases. Prior studies have identified specialized innate immune responses that are active in the intestinal epithelium following viral infection, but our understanding of the benefits of such an epithelium-specific response is incomplete. Here, we show that the intestinal epithelial antiviral response is programmed to enable protection while minimizing epithelial cytotoxicity that can often accompany an inflammatory response. Our findings offer new insight into the benefits of a tailored innate immune response at the intestinal barrier and suggest how dysregulation of this response could promote inflammatory disease.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyIntestinal epitheliumInnate immune systemImmunologyTumor necrosis factor alphaImmune systemCytotoxicityEpitheliumIntestinal mucosaInterferonInflammationIn vitroMedicineBiochemistryInternal medicineGeneticsViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiologyImmune Cell Function and Interactioninterferon and immune responses