Litcius/Paper detail

Leaky Gut and Autoimmunity: An Intricate Balance in Individuals Health and the Diseased State

Bilal Ahmad Paray, Mohammed Fahad Albeshr, Arif Tasleem Jan, Irfan A. Rather

2020International Journal of Molecular Sciences107 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Damage to the tissue and the ruining of functions characterize autoimmune syndromes. This review centers around leaky gut syndromes and how they stimulate autoimmune pathogenesis. Lymphoid tissue commonly associated with the gut, together with the neuroendocrine network, collaborates with the intestinal epithelial wall, with its paracellular tight junctions, to maintain the balance, tolerance, and resistance to foreign/neo-antigens. The physiological regulator of paracellular tight junctions plays a vital role in transferring macromolecules across the intestinal barrier and thereby maintains immune response equilibrium. A new paradigm has explained the intricacies of disease development and proposed that the processes can be prevented if the interaction between the genetic factor and environmental causes is barred by re-instituting the intestinal wall function. The latest clinical evidence and animal models reinforce this current thought and offer the basis for innovative methodologies to thwart and treat autoimmune syndromes.

Topics & Concepts

AutoimmunityParacellular transportImmune systemTight junctionImmunologyBiologyGut floraDiseaseNeuroscienceAutoimmune diseaseCell biologyMedicineGeneticsPathologyAntibodyPermeability (electromagnetism)MembraneMicroscopic ColitisCeliac Disease Research and ManagementGut microbiota and health