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The Iron age of host-microbe interactions

Journal

EMBO REPORTS
Volume 16, Issue 11, Pages 1482-1500

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/embr.201540558

Keywords

anemia of chronic disease; disease tolerance; heme; iron; macrophage; nutritional immunity; tissue damage control

Funding

  1. Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia [PTDC/SAU TOX/116627/2010, HMSP-ICT/0022/2010]
  2. European Community [ERC-2011-AdG. 294709 DAMAGECONTROL]
  3. Austrian Research fund [FWF-TRP-188]

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Microbes exert a major impact on human health and disease by either promoting or disrupting homeostasis, in the latter instance leading to the development of infectious diseases. Such disparate outcomes are driven by the ever-evolving genetic diversity of microbes and the countervailing host responses that minimize their pathogenic impact. Host defense strategies that limit microbial pathogenicity include resistance mechanisms that exert a negative impact on microbes, and disease tolerance mechanisms that sustain host homeostasis without interfering directly with microbes. While genetically distinct, these host defense strategies are functionally integrated, via mechanisms that remain incompletely defined. Here, we explore the general principles via which host adaptive responses regulating iron (Fe) metabolism impact on resistance and disease tolerance to infection.

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