Abstract

SummaryThe liver is a front‐line immune tissue that plays a major role in the detection, capture and clearance of pathogens and foreign antigens entering the bloodstream, especially from the gut. Our largest internal organ maintains this immune barrier in the face of constant exposure to external but harmless antigens through a highly specialized network of liver‐adapted immune cells. Mapping the immune resident compartment in the liver has been challenging because it requires multimodal single‐cell deep phenotyping approaches of often rare cell populations in difficult to access samples. We can now measure the RNA transcripts present in a single cell (scRNA‐seq), which is revolutionizing the way we characterize cell types. scRNA‐seq has been applied to the diverse array of immune cells present in murine and human livers in health and disease. Here, we summarize how emerging single‐cell technologies have advanced or redefined our understanding of the immunological barrier provided by the liver.

Highlights

  • The major portals of entry for pathogens into the body are the skin and mucosal surfaces of the respiratory, urogenital or gastrointestinal tracts

  • The liver is a front-line immune tissue that plays a major role in the detection, capture and clearance of pathogens and foreign antigens entering the bloodstream, especially from the gut

  • Our largest internal organ maintains this immune barrier in the face of constant exposure to external but harmless antigens through a highly specialized network of liveradapted immune cells

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Summary

Introduction

The major portals of entry for pathogens into the body are the skin and mucosal surfaces of the respiratory, urogenital or gastrointestinal tracts.

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