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. 2012:2012:492761.
doi: 10.1155/2012/492761. Epub 2011 Oct 27.

Development of mucosal immunity in children: a rationale for sublingual immunotherapy?

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Development of mucosal immunity in children: a rationale for sublingual immunotherapy?

Aleksandra Szczawinska-Poplonyk. J Allergy (Cairo). 2012.

Abstract

The mucosal immune system has bidirectional tasks to mount an effective defense against invading harmful pathogens and to suppress the immune response to alimentary antigens and commensal bacterial flora. Oral tolerance is a suppression of the mucosal immune pathway related to a specific immunophenotype of the dendritic cells and an induction of the regulatory T cells as well as with the silencing of the effector T cell response by anergy and deletion. The physiological dynamic process of the anatomical and functional maturation of the immune system occurring in children during pre- and postnatal periods is a significant factor, having an impact on the fine balance between the activation and the suppression of the immune response. In this paper, mechanisms of mucosal immunity and tolerance induction in terms of maturational issues are discussed with a special emphasis on the implications for a novel therapeutic intervention in allergic diseases via the sublingual route.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Exo- and endogenous biological factors determining mucosal immune response profile in childhood.

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