Literature DB >> 10692124

Interleukin-1 and cutaneous inflammation: a crucial link between innate and acquired immunity.

J E Murphy1, C Robert, T S Kupper.   

Abstract

As our primary interface with the environment, the skin is constantly subjected to injury and invasion by pathogens. The fundamental force driving the evolution of the immune system has been the need to protect the host against overwhelming infection. The ability of T and B cells to recombine antigen receptor genes during development provides an efficient, flexible, and powerful immune system with nearly unlimited specificity for antigen. The capacity to expand subsets of antigen-specific lymphocytes that become activated by environmental antigens (memory response) is termed "acquired" immunity. Immunologic memory, although a fundamental aspect of mammalian biology, is a relatively recent evolutionary event that permits organisms to live for years to decades. "Innate" immunity, mediated by genes that remain in germ line conformation and encode for proteins that recognize conserved structural patterns on microorganisms, is a much more ancient system of host defense. Defensins and other antimicrobial peptides, complement and opsonins, and endocytic receptors are all considered components of the innate immune system. None of these, however, are signal-transducing receptors. Most recently, a large family of cell surface receptors that mediate signaling through the NF-kappaB transcription factor has been identified. This family of proteins shares striking homology with plant and Drosophila genes that mediate innate immunity. In mammals, this family includes the type I interleukin-1 receptor, the interleukin-18 receptor, and a growing family of Toll-like receptors, two of which were recently identified as signal-transducing receptors for bacterial endotoxin. In this review, we discuss how interleukin-1 links the innate and acquired immune systems to provide synergistic host defense activities in skin.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10692124     DOI: 10.1046/j.1523-1747.2000.00917.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Invest Dermatol        ISSN: 0022-202X            Impact factor:   8.551


  40 in total

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Review 4.  Cytokines in psoriasis.

Authors:  Jaymie Baliwag; Drew H Barnes; Andrew Johnston
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5.  Essential oil from waste leaves of Curcuma longa L. alleviates skin inflammation.

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Review 6.  Inducible lymphoid clusters, iSALTs, in contact dermatitis: a new concept of acquired cutaneous immune responses.

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7.  Antigen presentation by keratinocytes directs autoimmune skin disease.

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Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2003-03-10       Impact factor: 11.205

8.  IL-1 signalling determines the fate of skin grafts expressing non-self protein in keratinocytes.

Authors:  Usriansyah Hadis; Graham R Leggatt; Ranjeny Thomas; Ian H Frazer; Eva M Kovacs
Journal:  Exp Dermatol       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 3.960

9.  Interleukin-1 receptor signaling protects mice from lethal intestinal damage caused by the attaching and effacing pathogen Citrobacter rodentium.

Authors:  Sarah L Lebeis; Kimberly R Powell; Didier Merlin; Melanie A Sherman; Daniel Kalman
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2008-12-15       Impact factor: 3.441

Review 10.  The Genetics and Epigenetics of Atopic Dermatitis-Filaggrin and Other Polymorphisms.

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Journal:  Clin Rev Allergy Immunol       Date:  2016-12       Impact factor: 8.667

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