Background: A noninvasive marker facilitating differential diagnosis in Crohn's disease (CD) is sought after. Midkine is a heparin-binding growth factor of angiogenic and chemotactic properties, positively evaluated as a tumor marker, and a possible association with CD has not yet been investigated.
Isolation of flagellated bacteria implicated in Crohn's disease
β Scribed by L. Wayne Duck; Mark R. Walter; Jan Novak; Denise Kelly; Maurizio Tomasi; Yingzi Cong; Charles O. Elson
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 745 KB
- Volume
- 13
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1078-0998
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Background: Serologic expression cloning has identified flagellins of the intestinal microbiota as immunodominant antigens in experimental colitis in mice and in individuals with Crohn's disease (CD). The present study was done to identify the microbial source of such flagellins.
Methods: Using a variety of isolation and culture approaches, a number of previously unknown flagellated bacteria were isolated. Based on 16S ribosomal DNA sequences, these bacteria fall into the family Lachnospiraceae of the phylum Firmicutes.
Results: Serum IgG from patients with CD and from mice with colitis reacted to the flagellins of these bacteria, and only their flagellins, whereas serum IgG from controls did not. The sequence of these flagellins demonstrate conserved amino-and carboxy-terminal domains that cluster phylogenetically and have a predicted 3D structure similar to Salmonella fliC, including an intact TLR5 binding site. The flagellin of 1 of these bacteria was likely O-glycosylated.
Conclusions:
The conserved immune response in both mouse and human to these previously unknown flagellins of the microbiota indicate that they play an important role in host-microbe interactions in the intestine.
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Background: Clinical, serological, and molecular data support the existence of discrete subsets of Crohn's disease (CD) defined by location of disease. Little is known about the epidemiology and natural history of isolated CD of the colon (Montreal Classification L2) because most studies have not ac