The therapeutic potential of positive and negative immune cell co-stimulation during inflammation

E. Gwyer, R. Snelgrove, T. Hussell

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Inflammatory cascades are initiated in response to alarm signals that may result from infection, malignant transformation or trauma. Immunity, however, must be controlled; otherwise damage may occur to otherwise healthy tissue within the same microenvironment. Similarly, peripheral tolerance mechanisms must ensure that autoreactive thymic or bone marrow emigrants do not respond upon encounter with the autoantigen. Organized lymphoid structures such as lymph nodes, spleen and Peyer's patches appear to regulate inflammation successfully, displaying controlled expansion and contraction. However, when immune cells flood into effector sites, the organization of T- and B-lymphocytes is lacking. What controls inflammatory cascades in lymph nodes but rarely in effector sites is not clear. We believe the difference lies in the Toll-like receptor ligand load, which is high in effector sites and drives uncontrolled inflammation. Similarly, we believe that initiation of autoimmune inflammation is initiated by the liberation of inflammatory signals due to infection or trauma. In this review, we highlight some of the molecules responsible for maintaining an activated T-cell phenotype, strategies to interrupt these therapeutically and the impact of ligating inhibitory receptors on antigen-presenting cells. ©2006 Biochemical Society.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1032-1036
    Number of pages4
    JournalBiochemical Society Transactions
    Volume34
    Issue number6
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2006

    Keywords

    • Antigen-presenting cell
    • Autoimmunity
    • Co-stimulation
    • Immune pathology
    • Inhibitory receptor
    • OX40

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