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Mucus enhances gut homeostasis and oral tolerance by delivering immunoregulatory signals

Authors :
Shan M
Gentile M
Yeiser JR
Walland AC
Bornstein VU
Chen K
He B
Cassis L
Bigas A
Cols M
Comerma L
Huang B
Blander JM
Xiong H
Mayer L
Berin C
Augenlicht LH
Velcich A
Cerutti A
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Zenodo, 2013.

Abstract

A dense mucus layer in the large intestine prevents inflammation by shielding the underlying epithelium from luminal bacteria and food antigens. This mucus barrier is organized around the hyperglycosylated mucin MUC2. Here we show that the small intestine has a porous mucus layer, which permitted the uptake of MUC2 by antigen-sampling dendritic cells (DCs). Glycans associated with MUC2 imprinted DCs with anti-inflammatory properties by assembling a galectin-3-Dectin-1-FcγRIIB receptor complex that activated β-catenin. This transcription factor interfered with DC expression of inflammatory but not tolerogenic cytokines by inhibiting gene transcription through nuclear factor κB. MUC2 induced additional conditioning signals in intestinal epithelial cells. Thus, mucus does not merely form a nonspecific physical barrier, but also constrains the immunogenicity of gut antigens by delivering tolerogenic signals

Subjects

Subjects :
respiratory system

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....baff14d6c239e478d914187a41394d66
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12933