0000000000598747

AUTHOR

I. Kaiser

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Tolerance exists towards resident intestinal flora but is broken in active inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)

1995

SUMMARY Hyporesponsiveness to a universe of bacterial and dietary antigens from the gut lumen is a hallmark of the intestinal immune system. Since hyperresponsiveness against these antigens might be associated with inflammation, we studied the immune response to the indigenous intestinal microflora in peripheral blood, inflamed and non-inflamed human intestine. Lamina propria monocuclear cells (LPMC) isolated from inflamed intestine but not peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of IBD patients with active inflammatory disease strongly proliferated after co-culture with sonicates of bacteria from autologous intestine (BsA), Proliferation was inhibitable by anti-MHC class II MoAb, suggest…

AdultImmunologyInflammationBiologyPeripheral blood mononuclear cellInflammatory bowel diseaseImmunophenotypingImmune toleranceImmune systemAntigenImmune TolerancemedicineHumansImmunology and AllergyCells CulturedLamina propriaCrohn's diseaseBacteriaMiddle AgedInflammatory Bowel Diseasesmedicine.diseaseIntestinesmedicine.anatomical_structureImmunologyCytokinesmedicine.symptomResearch ArticleClinical and Experimental Immunology
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