Guest guest Posted December 14, 2011 Report Share Posted December 14, 2011 Numerous anecdotes from parents of autistic children delineate excessively recurrent otitis media during the child's first two years and, correspondingly, numerous rounds of antibiotics. These retrospective tellings generally include a description of the child's regression into autism, often accompanied by the development of persistent gastrointestinal pathology. ~// Here is an excerpt from Li et al, highlight added: An altered bacterial composition, but not load, in the absence of AhR activity was not confined to the small intestine, where the IEL populations are reduced, but was also observed in the colon. This results in an accumulation of lymphocytes that show a predominant type 1 profile characterized by the production of IFN-g. This is in line with other murine models of colitis that report a deleterious role of the intestinal microbiota, especially during the transfer of T cells, and are dominated by a type 1 profile (Cong et al., 1998). */The direct importance of the microbiota in the activation of T cells was illustrated when AhR-deficient mice were treated with a broad-spectrum antibiotic, reducing both the number of T cells and their activation status/*. Our data are in also line with observations made in mice genetically engineered to lack TCRgd lymphocytes, contributing over half of the intestinal IELs, which are more susceptible to certain bacterial, protozoal, and viral infections and show increased morbidity (King et al., 1999; Mombaerts et al., 1993; et al., 2000; et al., 1996; Selin et al., 2001), and they are in agreement with increased morbidity of AhR-deficient mice and their increased susceptibility to colitis and rectal prolapse (Fernandez- Salguero et al., 1997; Kimura et al., 2009). > > You AhR what you eat: linking diet and immunity. > <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22036556> > Hooper LV. > Cell. 2011 Oct 28;147(3):489-91. > > The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) is responsible for the toxic > effects of environmental pollutants such as dioxin, but little is > known about its normal physiological functions. Li et al. (2011) now > show that specific dietary compounds present in cruciferous vegetables > act through the AhR to promote intestinal immune function, revealing > AhR as a critical link between diet and immunity. > > > Comment on > > Exogenous stimuli maintain intraepithelial lymphocytes via aryl > hydrocarbon receptor activation. > <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21999944> > Li Y, Innocentin S, Withers DR, NA, Gallagher AR, Grigorieva > EF, Wilhelm C, Veldhoen M. > Cell. 2011 Oct 28;147(3):629-40. Epub 2011 Oct 13. > > > PS: Everyone benefits when parents share informative anecdotes. This > post may be forwarded hither and yon. > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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