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The intestinal and biliary microbiome in autoimmune liver disease—current evidence and concepts

Timur Liwinski, Melina Heinemann, Christoph Schramm

2022Seminars in Immunopathology53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Autoimmune liver diseases are a group of immune-mediated liver diseases with three distinct entities, including autoimmune hepatitis, primary biliary cholangitis, and primary sclerosing cholangitis. The interplay of genetic and environmental factors leads to the breakdown of self-tolerance, resulting in hyper-responsiveness, and auto-aggressive immune activation. Emerging evidence links autoimmune liver diseases with alterations of the commensal microbiome configuration and aberrant immune system activation by microbial signals, mainly via the gut-liver axis. Thus, the microbiome is a new frontier to deepen the pathogenetic understanding, uncover biomarkers, and inspire innovative treatments. Herein, we review the current evidence on the role of the microbiome in autoimmune liver diseases from both clinical and basic research. We highlight recent achievements and also bottlenecks and limitations. Moreover, we give an outlook on future developments and potential for clinical applications.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomePrimary sclerosing cholangitisAutoimmune hepatitisImmune systemImmunologyLiver diseaseAutoimmune diseaseDiseaseBiologyMedicineHepatitisBioinformaticsAntibodyPathologyGastroenterologyLiver Diseases and ImmunityLiver Disease Diagnosis and TreatmentPediatric Hepatobiliary Diseases and Treatments
The intestinal and biliary microbiome in autoimmune liver disease—current evidence and concepts | Litcius