1st Edition

Intestinal Microbiota in Health and Disease Modern Concepts

    344 Pages 10 Color & 3 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    Now considered an organ with defensive and metabolic capabilities, the intestinal microbiota plays a major role in the local host immune system development and education. It contributes to the generation of a homeostatic balance characterized by the capacity to react against pathogens while remaining hyperresponsive/tolerant against commensals. This homeostatic response depends on bacteria and bacterial product sensing by innate immune cells and their molecular asset at the intestinal mucosa. This book captures the enormous progress that has been accomplished in this field in recent years.

    Commensal Intestinal Microbiota and Mucosal Immune System Development and Function
    Bacterial Imprinting of the Neonatal Immune System: Lessons From Maternal Cells. Interactions of the Intestinal Microbiota with the Epithelial Cells
    Host Genotype, Environmental Factors and Microbiota Composition
    Pathogen-Host Cell Interactions at the Intestinal Level: Lessons from Cultured Human Fully-Differentiated Colon Cancer Caco-2 and T84 Epithelial Cell Lines
    Manipulation of the Host-Cell Pathways by Bacterial Entero-Pathogens
    Use of Probiotic Cultures in Humans for the Management of Gastrointestinal Infections. Composition of the Dominant Microbiota During Flare-Ups and Remission of IBD
    Opportunistic Pathogens in IBD, and the Relation with Specific Gene Susceptibilities
    Opportunistic Pathogens in IBD, the Case of AIEC. Correction of Microbiota Disturbances or Antagonism against Specific Pathogens in IBD
    Probiotics in IBD That Can Modulate the Pathological Immune/Inflammatory Activation
    Their Potential Benefits in the Different Phases of the Disease
    Fecal Microbiota in Patients Receiving Enteral Nutrition
    How to Preserve a Healthy Intestinal Microbiota in the Intensive Care Patient
    Dietary Factors, Microbiota in Relation with Overweight and Diabetes

    Biography

    Eduardo J. Schiffrin, Philippe Marteau, Dominique Brassart

    "Overall this is a nice resource."
    —Koen Venema, in Beneficial Microbes