Innate immune sensing and its roots: the story of endotoxin

B Beutler, ET Rietschel - Nature reviews immunology, 2003 - nature.com
B Beutler, ET Rietschel
Nature reviews immunology, 2003nature.com
How does the host sense pathogens? Our present concepts grew directly from longstanding
efforts to understand infectious disease: how microbes harm the host, what molecules are
sensed and, ultimately, the nature of the receptors that the host uses. The discovery of the
host sensors—the Toll-like receptors—was rooted in chemical, biological and genetic
analyses that centred on a bacterial poison, termed endotoxin.
Abstract
How does the host sense pathogens? Our present concepts grew directly from longstanding efforts to understand infectious disease: how microbes harm the host, what molecules are sensed and, ultimately, the nature of the receptors that the host uses. The discovery of the host sensors — the Toll-like receptors — was rooted in chemical, biological and genetic analyses that centred on a bacterial poison, termed endotoxin.
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