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Environmental factors in epithelial barrier dysfunction

Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 2020 347 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Zeynep Çelebi Sözener, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Zeynep Çelebi Sözener, Zeynep Çelebi Sözener, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Lacin Cevhertas, Kari C. Nadeau Kari C. Nadeau Cezmi A. Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Kari C. Nadeau Cezmi A. Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Lacin Cevhertas, Mübeccel Akdiş, Lacin Cevhertas, Mübeccel Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Mübeccel Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Mübeccel Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Cezmi A. Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Mübeccel Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, Zeynep Çelebi Sözener, Mübeccel Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Kari C. Nadeau Cezmi A. Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Cezmi A. Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Cezmi A. Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Kari C. Nadeau Mübeccel Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Mübeccel Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau

Summary

This review examines how environmental factors from the modern industrialized world -- including air pollution, detergents, nanoparticles, and microplastics -- damage the protective lining of the skin, gut, and airways. Researchers describe how these exposures degrade the proteins that hold barrier cells together, increasing permeability and triggering immune responses linked to allergies, asthma, and inflammatory conditions. The study presents an "epithelial barrier hypothesis" suggesting that widespread barrier dysfunction from environmental pollutants may be driving the rise of chronic inflammatory diseases.

The main interfaces controlling and attempting to homeostatically balance communications between the host and the environment are the epithelial barriers of the skin, gastrointestinal system, and airways. The epithelial barrier constitutes the first line of physical, chemical, and immunologic defenses and provides a protective wall against environmental factors. Following the industrial revolution in the 19th century, urbanization and socioeconomic development have led to an increase in energy consumption, and waste discharge, leading to increased exposure to air pollution and chemical hazards. Particularly after the 1960s, biological and chemical insults from the surrounding environment-the exposome-have been disrupting the physical integrity of the barrier by degrading the intercellular barrier proteins at tight and adherens junctions, triggering epithelial alarmin cytokine responses such as IL-25, IL-33, and thymic stromal lymphopoietin, and increasing the epithelial barrier permeability. A typical type 2 immune response develops in affected organs in asthma, rhinitis, chronic rhinosinusitis, eosinophilic esophagitis, food allergy, and atopic dermatitis. The aim of this article was to discuss the effects of environmental factors such as protease enzymes of allergens, detergents, tobacco, ozone, particulate matter, diesel exhaust, nanoparticles, and microplastic on the integrity of the epithelial barriers in the context of epithelial barrier hypothesis.

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