The gastrointestinal (GI) tract is composed of a diverse set of organs that together receive extracorporeal nutrition and convert it to energy substrates and cellular building blocks. In the process, it must sort through all that we ingest and discriminate what is useable from what is not, and having done that, it discards what is “junk.” To accomplish these many and varied tasks, the GI tract relies on endogenous enteric hormones produced by enteroendocrine cells and the enteric nervous system. In many instances, the mediators of these tasks are small peptides that home to the CNS and accessory gut organs to coordinate oral intake with digestive secretions. As the contents of ingested material can contain harmful agents, the gut is armed with an extensive immune system. A breach of the epithelial barrier of the GI tract can result in local and eventually systemic disease if the gut does not mount an aggressive immune response.
Juanita L. Merchant
Title and authors | Publication | Year |
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Multi-omics perspective: mechanisms of gastrointestinal injury repair
Zhao H, Zhang Z, Liu H, Ma M, Sun P, Zhao Y, Liu X |
Burns & Trauma | 2025 |
Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome (SIRS) and the Pattern and Risk of Sepsis Following Gastrointestinal Perforation
Z Ye-Ting, T Dao-Ming |
Medical science monitor : international medical journal of experimental and clinical research | 2018 |
The Enteric Network: Interactions between the Immune and Nervous Systems of the Gut
BB Yoo, SK Mazmanian |
Immunity | 2017 |
Vagal afferent innervation of the proximal gastrointestinal tract mucosa: Chemoreceptor and mechanoreceptor architecture
TL Powley, RA Spaulding, SA Haglof |
The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2011 |