Gut Microbes (Mar 2020)

Mechanisms and consequences of gut commensal translocation in chronic diseases

  • Rebecca L. Fine,
  • Silvio Manfredo Vieira,
  • Michael S. Gilmore,
  • Martin A. Kriegel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/19490976.2019.1629236
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
pp. 217 – 230

Abstract

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Humans and other mammalian hosts have evolved mechanisms to control the bacteria colonizing their mucosal barriers to prevent invasion. While the breach of barriers by bacteria typically leads to overt infection, increasing evidence supports a role for translocation of commensal bacteria across an impaired gut barrier to extraintestinal sites in the pathogenesis of autoimmune and other chronic, non-infectious diseases. Whether gut commensal translocation is a cause or consequence of the disease is incompletely defined. Here we discuss factors that lead to translocation of live bacteria across the gut barrier. We expand upon our recently published demonstration that translocation of the gut pathobiont Enterococcus gallinarum can induce autoimmunity in susceptible hosts and postulate on the role of Enterococcus species as instigators of chronic, non-infectious diseases.

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