Abstract

The fruitless search for the cause of Crohn's disease has been conducted for more than a century. Various theories, including autoimmunity, mycobacterial infection and aberrant response to food and other ingested materials, have been abandoned for lack of robust proof. This review will provide the evidence, obtained from patients with this condition, that the common predisposition to Crohn's is a failure of the acute inflammatory response to tissue damage. This acute inflammation normally attracts large numbers of neutrophil leucocytes which engulf and clear bacteria and autologous debris from the inflamed site. The underlying predisposition in Crohn's disease is unmasked by damage to the bowel mucosa, predominantly through infection, which allows faecal bowel contents access to the vulnerable tissues within. Consequent upon failure of the clearance of these infectious and antigenic intestinal contents, it becomes contained, leading to a chronic granulomatous inflammation, producing cytokine release, local tissue damage and systemic symptoms. Multiple molecular pathologies extending across the whole spectrum of the acute inflammatory and innate immune response lead to the common predisposition in which defective monocyte and macrophage function plays a central role. Family linkage and exome sequencing together with GWAS have identified some of the molecules involved, including receptors, molecules involved in vesicle trafficking, and effector cells. Current therapy is immunosuppressant, which controls the symptoms but accentuates the underlying problem, which can only logically be tackled by correcting the primary lesion/s by gene therapy or genome editing, or through the development of drugs that stimulate innate immunity.

Highlights

  • The three-stage hypothesisThe cause of Crohn’s disease has remained an enigma for more than a century

  • The common theme of the results produced by these investigations is that the acute inflammatory response and innate immunity are defective, and that the specific lesions span the whole spectrum of the effector mechanisms of these responses from receptors and signalling pathways, through cytokine secretion and effector cell function

  • Was applied to the skin windows, it was without effect in those patients with CD-associated NOD2 mutations, in patients without such mutations it elevated the secretion of both cytokines and neutrophil emigration to normal levels

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Summary

Introduction

The three-stage hypothesisThe cause of Crohn’s disease has remained an enigma for more than a century. The common theme of the results produced by these investigations is that the acute inflammatory response and innate immunity are defective, and that the specific lesions span the whole spectrum of the effector mechanisms of these responses from receptors and signalling pathways, through cytokine secretion and effector cell function.

Results
Conclusion
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