Immune dysfunction as a cause and consequence of malnutrition

Malnutrition, which encompasses under- and over-nutrition, is responsible for an enormous morbidity and mortality burden globally. Malnutrition results from disordered nutrient assimilation but is also characterised by recurrent infections and chronic inflammation implying an underlying immune defec...

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Bibliografische gegevens
Hoofdauteurs: Bourke, C, Berkley, J, Prendergast, A
Formaat: Journal article
Gepubliceerd in: Cell Press 2016
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author Bourke, C
Berkley, J
Prendergast, A
author_facet Bourke, C
Berkley, J
Prendergast, A
author_sort Bourke, C
collection OXFORD
description Malnutrition, which encompasses under- and over-nutrition, is responsible for an enormous morbidity and mortality burden globally. Malnutrition results from disordered nutrient assimilation but is also characterised by recurrent infections and chronic inflammation implying an underlying immune defect. Defects emerge before birth via modifications in the immunoepigenome of malnourished parents, which may contribute to intergenerational cycles of malnutrition. This review summarises key recent studies from experimental animals, in vitro models, and human cohorts and proposes that immune dysfunction is both a cause and a consequence of malnutrition. Focusing on childhood undernutrition, we highlight gaps in current understanding of immune dysfunction in malnutrition, with a view to therapeutically targeting immune pathways as novel means of reducing morbidity and mortality.
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spelling oxford-uuid:c0d1e17f-ead3-4931-a619-a72010205cc22022-03-27T05:57:06ZImmune dysfunction as a cause and consequence of malnutritionJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:c0d1e17f-ead3-4931-a619-a72010205cc2Symplectic Elements at OxfordCell Press2016Bourke, CBerkley, JPrendergast, AMalnutrition, which encompasses under- and over-nutrition, is responsible for an enormous morbidity and mortality burden globally. Malnutrition results from disordered nutrient assimilation but is also characterised by recurrent infections and chronic inflammation implying an underlying immune defect. Defects emerge before birth via modifications in the immunoepigenome of malnourished parents, which may contribute to intergenerational cycles of malnutrition. This review summarises key recent studies from experimental animals, in vitro models, and human cohorts and proposes that immune dysfunction is both a cause and a consequence of malnutrition. Focusing on childhood undernutrition, we highlight gaps in current understanding of immune dysfunction in malnutrition, with a view to therapeutically targeting immune pathways as novel means of reducing morbidity and mortality.
spellingShingle Bourke, C
Berkley, J
Prendergast, A
Immune dysfunction as a cause and consequence of malnutrition
title Immune dysfunction as a cause and consequence of malnutrition
title_full Immune dysfunction as a cause and consequence of malnutrition
title_fullStr Immune dysfunction as a cause and consequence of malnutrition
title_full_unstemmed Immune dysfunction as a cause and consequence of malnutrition
title_short Immune dysfunction as a cause and consequence of malnutrition
title_sort immune dysfunction as a cause and consequence of malnutrition
work_keys_str_mv AT bourkec immunedysfunctionasacauseandconsequenceofmalnutrition
AT berkleyj immunedysfunctionasacauseandconsequenceofmalnutrition
AT prendergasta immunedysfunctionasacauseandconsequenceofmalnutrition