Autoimmunity reviews
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Autoimmunity reviews · Mar 2012
ReviewThe fresco of autoinflammatory diseases from the pediatric perspective.
Autoinflammatory diseases are genetic or acquired clinical entities globally caused by the aberrant release of the proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-1 and mostly characterized by recurrent spontaneous inflammatory events which do not produce antigen-specific T cells or autoantibodies. Within the past decade, the list of autoinflammatory diseases has included cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes, familial Mediterranean fever, mevalonate kinase deficiency, tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated periodic syndrome, hereditary pyogenic disorders, pediatric granulomatous autoinflammatory diseases, idiopathic febrile syndromes, complement dysregulation syndromes and Behçet's disease. ⋯ The pathogenetic mechanisms of these diseases have shown the evidence of disrupted interleukin-1 signaling for most of them and allowed to locate interleukin-1 as an attractive therapeutic target. The whole fresco of autoinflammatory diseases in pediatrics will be discussed in this review with the aim of establishing both diagnostic clues and treatments for each condition.
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Autoimmunity reviews · Mar 2012
The biological significance of TLR3 variant, L412F, in conferring susceptibility to cutaneous candidiasis, CMV and autoimmunity.
Toll-like receptors, a major component of the innate immune system, play an important role in the initial response against pathogens. Genetic abnormalities in some receptors like TLR2, TLR3 and TLR4 have been associated with susceptibility to fungal and viral infections while other aberrations in TLR genes such as TLR3, TLR7 and TLR9 may predispose to autoimmunity. Recently we have shown an association of a TLR3 receptor variant, L412F, to susceptibility to chronic candidiasis, recurrent viral and bacterial infections and autoimmunity. We investigated here the biological implications of this TLR3 mutant. ⋯ We have shown here aberrant biological responses mediated by the TLR3 variant receptor, L412F, which may explain in part susceptibility of patients to chronic candidiasis, viral infections and autoimmunity.