The Toll-like receptors and their role in septic shock

2003 
The Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are a class of pattern recognition molecules with unique functions in the innate and the acquired immune systems. The innate immune response has evolved as the immediate host defence system in response to foreign structures and it also serves to prime the adaptive immune response. As such, the TLRs set the tone and pace of the inflammatory response that follows initial contact with a microbial pathogen over the course of the following minutes, hours and days. Sepsis, a leading cause of death in critically ill patients worldwide, is defined as ‘the systemic inflammatory response syndrome that occurs during infection’ [1]; that is, sepsis is the orchestration of the events controlled by the gene products triggered by signals transduced through the TLRs. Through analysis of the human genome, ten TLRs have been identified, and several of them have been characterised with respect to their associated ligands. Following engagement of the cognate ligand to the ectodomain of each TLR...
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