Issue 7, 2022

From the banal to the bizarre: unravelling immune recognition and response to microbial lipids

Abstract

Microbes produce a rich array of lipidic species that through their location in the cell wall and ability to mingle with host lipids represent a privileged class of immune-active molecules. Lipid-sensing immunity recognizes microbial lipids from pathogens and commensals causing immune responses. Yet microbial lipids are often heterogeneous, in limited supply and in some cases their structures are incompletely defined. Total synthesis can assist in structural determination, overcome supply issues, and provide access to high-purity, homogeneous samples and analogues. This account highlights synthetic approaches to lipidic species from pathogenic and commensal bacteria and fungi that have supported immunological studies involving lipid sensing through the pattern recognition receptor Mincle and cell-mediated immunity through the CD1-T cell axis.

Graphical abstract: From the banal to the bizarre: unravelling immune recognition and response to microbial lipids

Article information

Article type
Feature Article
Submitted
25 Oct 2021
Accepted
14 Dec 2021
First published
16 Dec 2021

Chem. Commun., 2022,58, 925-940

From the banal to the bizarre: unravelling immune recognition and response to microbial lipids

L. Burchill and S. J. Williams, Chem. Commun., 2022, 58, 925 DOI: 10.1039/D1CC06003A

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