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      Host protective roles of type 2 immunity: Parasite killing and tissue repair, flip sides of the same coin

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          Highlights

          • Type 2 immunity is associated with both helminth infection and responses to injury.

          • Pathways involved in tissue repair and helminth immunity overlap.

          • The IL-4Rα is central to accelerating both repair and helminth control.

          • Adaptive immunity contributes to more rapid wound repair.

          Abstract

          Metazoan parasites typically induce a type 2 immune response, characterized by T helper 2 (Th2) cells that produce the cytokines IL-4, IL-5 and IL-13 among others. The type 2 response is host protective, reducing the number of parasites either through direct killing in the tissues, or expulsion from the intestine. Type 2 immunity also protects the host against damage mediated by these large extracellular parasites as they migrate through the body. At the center of both the innate and adaptive type 2 immune response, is the IL-4Rα that mediates many of the key effector functions. Here we highlight the striking overlap between the molecules, cells and pathways that mediate both parasite control and tissue repair. We have proposed that adaptive Th2 immunity evolved out of our innate repair pathways to mediate both accelerated repair and parasite control in the face of continual assault from multicellular pathogens. Type 2 cytokines are involved in many aspects of mammalian physiology independent of helminth infection. Therefore understanding the evolutionary relationship between helminth killing and tissue repair should provide new insight into immune mechanisms of tissue protection in the face of physical injury.

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          Most cited references128

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          Inflammation in wound repair: molecular and cellular mechanisms.

          In post-natal life the inflammatory response is an inevitable consequence of tissue injury. Experimental studies established the dogma that inflammation is essential to the establishment of cutaneous homeostasis following injury, and in recent years information about specific subsets of inflammatory cell lineages and the cytokine network orchestrating inflammation associated with tissue repair has increased. Recently, this dogma has been challenged, and reports have raised questions on the validity of the essential prerequisite of inflammation for efficient tissue repair. Indeed, in experimental models of repair, inflammation has been shown to delay healing and to result in increased scarring. Furthermore, chronic inflammation, a hallmark of the non-healing wound, predisposes tissue to cancer development. Thus, a more detailed understanding in mechanisms controlling the inflammatory response during repair and how inflammation directs the outcome of the healing process will serve as a significant milestone in the therapy of pathological tissue repair. In this paper, we review cellular and molecular mechanisms controlling inflammation in cutaneous tissue repair and provide a rationale for targeting the inflammatory phase in order to modulate the outcome of the healing response.
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            Transforming growth factor-beta regulation of immune responses.

            Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) is a potent regulatory cytokine with diverse effects on hemopoietic cells. The pivotal function of TGF-beta in the immune system is to maintain tolerance via the regulation of lymphocyte proliferation, differentiation, and survival. In addition, TGF-beta controls the initiation and resolution of inflammatory responses through the regulation of chemotaxis, activation, and survival of lymphocytes, natural killer cells, dendritic cells, macrophages, mast cells, and granulocytes. The regulatory activity of TGF-beta is modulated by the cell differentiation state and by the presence of inflammatory cytokines and costimulatory molecules. Collectively, TGF-beta inhibits the development of immunopathology to self or nonharmful antigens without compromising immune responses to pathogens. This review highlights the findings that have advanced our understanding of TGF-beta in the immune system and in disease.
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              Local macrophage proliferation, rather than recruitment from the blood, is a signature of TH2 inflammation.

              A defining feature of inflammation is the accumulation of innate immune cells in the tissue that are thought to be recruited from the blood. We reveal that a distinct process exists in which tissue macrophages undergo rapid in situ proliferation in order to increase population density. This inflammatory mechanism occurred during T helper 2 (T(H)2)-related pathologies under the control of the archetypal T(H)2 cytokine interleukin-4 (IL-4) and was a fundamental component of T(H)2 inflammation because exogenous IL-4 was sufficient to drive accumulation of tissue macrophages through self-renewal. Thus, expansion of innate cells necessary for pathogen control or wound repair can occur without recruitment of potentially tissue-destructive inflammatory cells.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Semin Immunol
                Semin. Immunol
                Seminars in Immunology
                Academic Press
                1044-5323
                1096-3618
                1 August 2014
                August 2014
                : 26
                : 4
                : 329-340
                Affiliations
                [0005]Centre for Immunity, Infection & Evolution, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author at: School of Biological Sciences, West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, United Kingdom. Tel.: +44 0 131 650 7014. j.allen@ 123456ed.ac.uk
                Article
                S1044-5323(14)00060-8
                10.1016/j.smim.2014.06.003
                4179909
                25028340
                9a5b7a8f-5071-4cf1-9659-e9201d267e2f
                © 2014 The Authors
                History
                Categories
                Review

                Immunology
                il-4rα, interleukin-4 receptor alpha,ilc, innate lymphoid cell,tslp, thymic stromal lymphopoietin,aamφ, alternatively activated macrophage,helminths,th2 cells,wound repair,macrophages,eosinophils,il-4rα

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