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Antimicrobial peptides, normally sterile urinary innate immunity, and the tract

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JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY
卷 18, 期 11, 页码 2810-2816

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AMER SOC NEPHROLOGY
DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2007050611

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Considering the anatomical location of the urethral meatus, it is surprising that urine is normally sterile. The defensive properties of uroepithelia help maintain this sterility as strategically necessary for long-term survival. Epithelia lining the urinary tract prevent adhesion of bacteria by release of Tamm-Horsfall protein, lactoferrin, lipocalin, and constitutive and inducible bactericidal antimicrobial peptides such as alpha- and beta-defensins and cathelicidin. Microbes that overwhelm these early defenses contact uroepithelia and activate an innate immune response through Toll-like receptor 4. With persistence of increasing numbers of microbes, chemokines (IL-8) and cytokines (IL-1 and TNF alpha) attract and activate large numbers of neutrophils and macrophages that damage tubulointerstitial parenchyma. The risk of serious infection in humans seems quite variable. Cathelicidin, for example, is a vitamin D-dependent gene, and vitamin D stores may influence susceptibility to urinary tract infection in selected individuals. As more knowledge accrues, vitamin D supplementation may someday be useful as adjuvant therapy in this setting.

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