Mechanisms of disease: defensins in gastrointestinal diseases.

Jan Wehkamp, Klaus Fellermann, Klaus R Herrlinger, Charles L Bevins, Eduard F Stange

School of Medicine, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of California, Davis, California 95616, USA.

Journal Article: Nature Clinical Practice Gastroenterology &#38 Hepatology (impact factor: 4.52). 10/2005; 2(9):406-15. DOI: 10.1038/ncpgasthep0265

Abstract

Defensins are endogenous antibiotics with microbicidal activity against Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria, fungi, viruses and protozoa. In the gastrointestinal tract, defensins help regulate the composition and number of colonizing microbes, and protect the host from food-borne and water-borne pathogens. In health, the normal host relationship with the commensal luminal microbiota is beneficial, but the same commensal bacteria could have a pathogenic role in inflammatory diseases. A disturbance in antimicrobial defense, as provided by Paneth cells of the small intestine, seems to be a critical factor in the pathogenesis of ileal Crohn's disease, an inflammatory disease of the intestinal tract. The disruption of the critical balance between antimicrobial peptides and luminal bacteria might also explain other gastrointestinal infections and diseases. Elucidating the underlying mechanisms involved in the regulation and biology of defensins could open up new therapeutic avenues.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

antimicrobial defense
 
colonizing microbes
 
commensal bacteria
 
commensal luminal microbiota
 
critical balance
 
critical factor
 
diseases
 
disruption
 
Gram-positive bacteria
 
ileal Crohn's disease
 
inflammatory disease
 
inflammatory diseases
 
luminal bacteria
 
microbicidal activity
 
new therapeutic avenues
 
normal host relationship
 
pathogenic role
 
small intestine
 
underlying mechanisms
 
water-borne pathogens