Current opinion in immunology
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Curr. Opin. Immunol. · Dec 2014
ReviewSelf-DNA, STING-dependent signaling and the origins of autoinflammatory disease.
Self-DNA has long been considered a key cause of inflammatory and autoimmune disease, although the exact origin and general mechanisms of action have remained to be elucidated. Recently, new insight has been gained into our understanding of those innate immune pathways and sensors that are responsible for instigating self-DNA triggered autoinflammatory events in the cell. ⋯ STING may also be involved with augmenting certain types of carcinogen induced cancer. Aside from generating valuable information into mechanisms underlining innate immune gene regulation, these findings offer new opportunities to generate innovative therapeutics which may help treat such diseases.
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Curr. Opin. Immunol. · Aug 2013
ReviewMonitoring the immune response in sepsis: a rational approach to administration of immunoadjuvant therapies.
Preliminary studies suggest that a subgroup of septic patients with severe immune alterations is at high risk of death or nosocomial infection and therefore could benefit from adjunctive immune stimulating therapies. There is thus an urgent need for robust biomarkers usable in routine conditions evaluating rapidly evolving immune status in patients. ⋯ Therefore, surrogate markers such as monocyte HLA-DR expression, are being developed. Such biomarkers of immune functionality will enable a novel approach in the design of clinical trials evaluating immunostimulating therapies in sepsis at the right time and in the right patient.
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Curr. Opin. Immunol. · Aug 2012
ReviewImmune senescence and vaccines to prevent herpes zoster in older persons.
Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) T-cell-mediated immunity (VZV-CMI) in older persons prevents latent VZV in sensory neurons from reactivating to cause herpes zoster. VZV-CMI declines greatly with aging, but can be restored by the licensed zoster vaccine. ⋯ To understand these aging effects, limited information about the phenotypic and functional differences in VZV-CMI in old and young persons are reviewed, as well as the reversal of these differences by vaccination. Based on information from these studies some potential approaches to improving prevention of herpes zoster are discussed.
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Curr. Opin. Immunol. · Oct 2011
ReviewCross-regulation between the IL-1β/IL-18 processing inflammasome and other inflammatory cytokines.
The inflammasome-forming NLRs are well characterized members of a protein complex mediating the activation of caspase-1 and the cleavage of pro-IL-1β and pro-IL-18 into their active, secreted forms. New data suggest that components of the inflammasome cascade may have roles in influencing inflammasome-independent pathways of cytokine production. These influences on other immune cytokine pathways are complemented by data suggesting that non-inflammasome cytokines can influence the activation of the inflammasome, either directly or by influencing transcription of inflammasome components. The crosstalk between these cytokine cascades may lead to increased abilities for the cell to respond to diverse pathogen threats.