Audiobook

Apr 25, 2025 | biology, health and medicine

About this episode

Our gut contains a sleepless army, creating a hostile environment for pathogens, and helping to fortify our body’s immune defences. It may surprise you to learn that this army isn’t even human in nature, but is bacterial. The trillions of bacteria that naturally live in our gut, known as the gut microbiota, form an important component of our overall immunity against infectious disease. While bacteria can also cause disease, beneficial bacteria naturally colonise available spaces in our body, such as the gut, and play a key role in our immunity and physiology. Research conducted by Prof. Nelson Gekara of Stockholm University in Sweden and colleagues has revealed that these microscopic organisms play a crucial role in protecting us from viral infections, even in organs that are unconnected to the gut. Their study, published in the journal Immunity, uncovers a fascinating link between the gut microbiota and our body’s ability to fight viruses, offering new insights into immune function and the unintended consequences of antibiotic use. More

Original Article Reference

This Audio is a summary of the paper ‘The gut microbiota prime systemic antiviral immunity via the cGAS-STING-IFN-I axis’, in Immunity, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.immuni.2022.04.006 

Contact

For further information, you can connect with Prof. Nelson Gekara at Stockholm University Sweden (at nelson.gekara@su.se) or at the University Medical Center Freiburg Germany (at nelson.ongondo.gekara@uniklinik-freiburg.de).

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