The finding provides a deeper understanding of our first line of defence, and what happens when it goes wrong.
It will lead to new ways of diagnosing and treating inflammatory bowel disease, peptic ulcers and even TB, and may pave way for novel protective vaccines, researchers said.
"Our intestines, lungs and mouths are lined with mysterious immune cells that make up to ten per cent of the T cells in our immune system," said Professor James McCluskey Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research) at University of Melbourne.
The immune cells, known as mucosal-associated invariant T cells (MAITS), initiate the immune system's action against foreign invaders when they are exposed to vitamin B2, which is made by bacteria and fungi.
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"MAIT cells are a discovery so recent that they have not even made it into the textbooks. Most doctors know nothing about them. Yet they constitute about one cell in ten of the body's T cells and half of all the T cells in the liver," McCluskey said.
The research was published in the journal Nature.