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Innate immunity of the liver microcirculation
Journal article

Innate immunity of the liver microcirculation

Abstract

The liver is a complex organ with a unique microcirculation and both synthetic and immune functions. Innate immune responses have been studied in response to single inflammatory mediators and several clinically relevant models of infection and injury. While standard histological techniques have been used in many models, the liver microcirculation is also amenable to in vivo examination using epifluorescent, confocal and transillumination intravital microscopy. These techniques have begun to clarify not only the molecular mechanisms but also the specific cell populations involved in the liver inflammation. In this review, we discuss the cells and mediators involved in hepatic innate immunity in simple and complex models of injury and infection, and present the view that the liver microcirculation utilizes non-classical pathways for leukocyte recruitment.

Authors

Kowalewska PM; Patrick AL; Fox-Robichaud AE

Journal

Cell and Tissue Research, Vol. 343, No. 1, pp. 85–96

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

January 1, 2011

DOI

10.1007/s00441-010-1058-5

ISSN

0302-766X

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