Regulatory T-Cells: Diverse Phenotypes Integral to Immune Homeostasis and Suppression

2012 
Regulatory T-cells (TREG) are diverse populations of lymphocytes that regulate the adaptive immune response in higher vertebrates. TREG delete autoreactive T-cells, induce tolerance, and dampen inflammation. TREG cell deficiency in humans (i.e., IPEX [Immunodysregulation, Polyendocrinopathy and Enteropathy, X-linked syndrome]) and animal models (e.g., “Scurfy” mouse) is associated with multisystemic autoimmune disease. TREG in humans and laboratory animal species are similar in type and regulatory function. A molecular marker of and the cell lineage specification factor for TREG is FOXP3, a forkhead box transcription factor. CD4+ TREG are either natural (nTREG), which are thymus-derived CD4+CD25+FOXP3+ T-cells, or inducible (i.e., Tr1 cells that secrete IL-10, Th3 cells that secrete TGF-β and IL-10, and Foxp3+ Treg). The proinflammatory Th17 subset has been a major focus of research. TH17 CD4+ effector T-cells secrete IL-17, IL-21, and IL-22 in autoimmune and inflammatory disease, and are dynamically bala...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    191
    References
    174
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []