The Neonatal Immune System: A Unique Host-Microbial Interface

Emerging from the protective environment of the uterus, the newborn is exposed to a myriad of microbes, and quickly establishes a complex microbiome that shapes the infant’s biology in ways that are only now beginning to come to light. Among these exposures are a number of potential pathogens. The h...

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Superior document:Frontiers Research Topics
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Year of Publication:2018
Language:English
Series:Frontiers Research Topics
Physical Description:1 electronic resource (175 p.)
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The Neonatal Immune System: A Unique Host-Microbial Interface
Neonatal Immune System
Frontiers Media SA 2018
1 electronic resource (175 p.)
text txt rdacontent
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Frontiers Research Topics
Emerging from the protective environment of the uterus, the newborn is exposed to a myriad of microbes, and quickly establishes a complex microbiome that shapes the infant’s biology in ways that are only now beginning to come to light. Among these exposures are a number of potential pathogens. The host responses to these pathogens in the neonatal period are unique, reflecting a developing immune system even with delivery at term. Preterm infants are delivered at a time when host defense mechanisms are even less developed and therefore face additional risk. As such, the organisms that cause disease in this period are different from the pathogens that are common in other age groups, or the disease they cause manifests in more severe fashion. Developmental alterations in both innate and adaptive immune responses in neonates have been documented among many cell types and pathways over the last several decades. Contemporary insights into the human immune system and methodologies that allow an “omics” approach to these questions have continued to provide new information regarding the mechanisms that underlie the human neonate as an “immunocompromised host.” This Research Topic highlights studies related to this unique host-pathogen interface. Contributions include those related to the innate or adaptive immune system of neonates, their response to microbial colonization or infection, and/or the pathogenesis of microbes causing disease in neonates.
English
Infection
Neonate
Candida
Sepsis
Necrotizing enterocolitis
Vaccine
Immunity
Microbiome
2-88945-403-7
James L. Wynn auth
language English
format eBook
author Joseph M. Bliss
spellingShingle Joseph M. Bliss
The Neonatal Immune System: A Unique Host-Microbial Interface
Frontiers Research Topics
author_facet Joseph M. Bliss
James L. Wynn
author_variant j m b jmb
author2 James L. Wynn
author2_variant j l w jlw
author_sort Joseph M. Bliss
title The Neonatal Immune System: A Unique Host-Microbial Interface
title_full The Neonatal Immune System: A Unique Host-Microbial Interface
title_fullStr The Neonatal Immune System: A Unique Host-Microbial Interface
title_full_unstemmed The Neonatal Immune System: A Unique Host-Microbial Interface
title_auth The Neonatal Immune System: A Unique Host-Microbial Interface
title_alt Neonatal Immune System
title_new The Neonatal Immune System: A Unique Host-Microbial Interface
title_sort the neonatal immune system: a unique host-microbial interface
series Frontiers Research Topics
series2 Frontiers Research Topics
publisher Frontiers Media SA
publishDate 2018
physical 1 electronic resource (175 p.)
isbn 2-88945-403-7
illustrated Not Illustrated
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