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Description
The gut environment is fundamental to the modulation of innate and adaptive immunity, not only in the intestinal mucosa, but systemically. Immune cells constantly circulate through the intestinal tissue and gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT), where their phenotype and function are regulated by several factors, including but not limited to the commensal gut microbiota.
Table of Contents
1. Intestinal Hub for development and regulation of innate and adaptive immunity.- 2. Gut microbiota and immune homeostasis at the intestinal and systemic level.- 3. The Intestinal epithelial barrier.- 4. The gut vascular barrier.- 5. Anti-microbial peptides.- 6. The mucus layer.- 7. Intestinal mucosal immunity and biological gut barriers shaping microbiota composition.- 8. Food for the immune system: dietary components for modulating systemic immunity.- 9. Microbial metabolites from commensal microbiota and immune homeostasis.- 10. Endogenous bile acid metabolites with immune regulatory functions.- 11. Neuroimmune interaction at the intestinal barrier surface.- 12. The interplay between commensal microbiota, gut barrier integrity, and mucosal immunity regulates extra-intestinal autoimmune diseases.- 13. Gut regulators of cancer.- 14. Strengthening innate and adaptive immunity against viral infections in the gut.- 15. Changing the gut environment to modulate immune response in extra-intestinal pathologies.



