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Blood, 12 February 2009, Vol. 113, No. 7, pp. 1399-1407.
Prepublished online as a Blood First Edition Paper on August 29, 2008; DOI 10.1182/blood-2008-07-019307.


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Submitted July 8, 2008
Accepted August 15, 2008

TLRs and innate immunity

Bruce A. Beutler*

Department of Genetics, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA, United States

* Corresponding author; email: bruce{at}scripps.edu.

One of the most fundamental questions in immunology pertains to the recognition of non-self, which for the most part, means microbes. How do we initially realize that we have been inoculated with microbes, and how is the immune response ignited? Genetic studies have made important inroads into this question during the past decade and we now know that in mammals, a relatively small number of receptors operate to detect signature molecules that herald infection, one or more of which is displayed by almost all microbes. These receptors, and the signals they initiate, have been studied in depth by random germline mutagenesis and positional cloning (forward genetics). Herein is a concise description of what has been learned about the Toll-like receptors, which play an essential part in the perception of microbes and shape the complex host responses that occur during infection.


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