The Epithelial Gatekeeper Against Food Allergy

The rapid rise of allergic disorders in developed countries has been attributed to the hygiene hypothesis, implicating that increased environmental sanitation in early childhood may be associated with higher incidence of hypersensitivity. Intestinal epithelial barriers play a crucial role in the mai...

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Main Author: Linda Chia-Hui Yu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2009-12-01
Series:Pediatrics and Neonatology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1875957209600723
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spelling doaj-f143c22ecb9d4d06aaf6273a899a62bb2020-11-24T22:39:24ZengElsevierPediatrics and Neonatology1875-95722009-12-0150624725410.1016/S1875-9572(09)60072-3The Epithelial Gatekeeper Against Food AllergyLinda Chia-Hui YuThe rapid rise of allergic disorders in developed countries has been attributed to the hygiene hypothesis, implicating that increased environmental sanitation in early childhood may be associated with higher incidence of hypersensitivity. Intestinal epithelial barriers play a crucial role in the maintenance of gut homeostasis by limiting penetration of luminal bacteria and dietary allergens, yet allowing antigen sampling via the follicle-associated epithelium for generation of tolerance. However, this intricate balance is upset in allergic intestines, whereby luminal proteins with antigenic properties gain access to the subepithelial compartment and stimulate mast cell degranulation. Recent studies demonstrated that food allergens were protected from lysosomal degradation, and were transported in large quantities across the epithelium by binding to cell surface IgE/CD23 (FceRII) that prevented the antigenic protein from lysosomal degradation in enterocytes. IL-4 (a Th2-type cytokine) not only increased production of IgE from B cells, but also upregulated the expression of CD23 on intestinal epithelial cells. Further studies indicated that CD23 was responsible for the bidirectional transport of IgE across epithelium. The presence of IgE/CD23 opens a gate for intact dietary allergens to transcytose across the epithelial cells, and thus foments the mast cell-dependent anaphylactic responses. The understanding of the molecular mechanism responsible for epithelial barrier defects may be helpful in designing novel therapies to treat food allergy and other allergic diseases.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1875957209600723allergen uptakecommensal bacteriaepithelial permeabilityfood allergyIgE/CD23intestinal barrier function
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Linda Chia-Hui Yu
spellingShingle Linda Chia-Hui Yu
The Epithelial Gatekeeper Against Food Allergy
Pediatrics and Neonatology
allergen uptake
commensal bacteria
epithelial permeability
food allergy
IgE/CD23
intestinal barrier function
author_facet Linda Chia-Hui Yu
author_sort Linda Chia-Hui Yu
title The Epithelial Gatekeeper Against Food Allergy
title_short The Epithelial Gatekeeper Against Food Allergy
title_full The Epithelial Gatekeeper Against Food Allergy
title_fullStr The Epithelial Gatekeeper Against Food Allergy
title_full_unstemmed The Epithelial Gatekeeper Against Food Allergy
title_sort epithelial gatekeeper against food allergy
publisher Elsevier
series Pediatrics and Neonatology
issn 1875-9572
publishDate 2009-12-01
description The rapid rise of allergic disorders in developed countries has been attributed to the hygiene hypothesis, implicating that increased environmental sanitation in early childhood may be associated with higher incidence of hypersensitivity. Intestinal epithelial barriers play a crucial role in the maintenance of gut homeostasis by limiting penetration of luminal bacteria and dietary allergens, yet allowing antigen sampling via the follicle-associated epithelium for generation of tolerance. However, this intricate balance is upset in allergic intestines, whereby luminal proteins with antigenic properties gain access to the subepithelial compartment and stimulate mast cell degranulation. Recent studies demonstrated that food allergens were protected from lysosomal degradation, and were transported in large quantities across the epithelium by binding to cell surface IgE/CD23 (FceRII) that prevented the antigenic protein from lysosomal degradation in enterocytes. IL-4 (a Th2-type cytokine) not only increased production of IgE from B cells, but also upregulated the expression of CD23 on intestinal epithelial cells. Further studies indicated that CD23 was responsible for the bidirectional transport of IgE across epithelium. The presence of IgE/CD23 opens a gate for intact dietary allergens to transcytose across the epithelial cells, and thus foments the mast cell-dependent anaphylactic responses. The understanding of the molecular mechanism responsible for epithelial barrier defects may be helpful in designing novel therapies to treat food allergy and other allergic diseases.
topic allergen uptake
commensal bacteria
epithelial permeability
food allergy
IgE/CD23
intestinal barrier function
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1875957209600723
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