2010
DOI: 10.3109/08830180903434219
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The Balancing Act of Autoimmunity: Central and Peripheral Tolerance Versus Infection Control

Abstract: Genetic associations with autoimmune disease are enriched in immune response regulators. The immune system in individuals at genetic risk of autoimmunity must balance pressures on the innate and adaptive immune system, most notably infection control, with those of maintaining self-tolerance or controlling autoimmune inflammation. In spite of multiple tolerance mechanisms, inflammation becomes chronic in autoimmune disease, and complete resolution is difficult. This article proposes a perspective on the pathoge… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Too much immunity results in autoimmune disorders, and too little immunity results in infections. Thus, optimal immunity requires a balance between autoimmunity and opportunistic infections (Thomas, 2010; Fujio et al, 2012). There are no exact cutoff values that define high, optimal, or low immunity levels for inflammatory mediators.…”
Section: General Overview Of the Biology Of Diabetic Nephropathymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Too much immunity results in autoimmune disorders, and too little immunity results in infections. Thus, optimal immunity requires a balance between autoimmunity and opportunistic infections (Thomas, 2010; Fujio et al, 2012). There are no exact cutoff values that define high, optimal, or low immunity levels for inflammatory mediators.…”
Section: General Overview Of the Biology Of Diabetic Nephropathymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Firstly, by a reduction in suppressor T cell (T regulatory cell) activity; secondly, due to the modification of normal self-antigens, by drugs, environmental chemicals, viruses, or mutations; and thirdly, due to an exposure in the direction of an antigen that is very similar to self-antigen ("molecular mimicry"). This is a good example of how important it is for the immune system to stay in balance with itself since any imbalance may cause a threat and might bring about unwanted repercussions [35][36][37][38].…”
Section: Autoimmunitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, mice in which DCs and Langerhans cells are extensively ablated develop severe autoimmune disease associated with myeloid proliferation and T and B lymphocyte activation, demonstrating the essential constitutive role that DCs play in peripheral self-tolerance (1). The mechanisms by which DCs maintain peripheral tolerance are still unclear, but they include central or peripheral clonal deletion, ignorance, anergy, and regulation, both through induction of functional regulatory T cells (Tregs) and through immunosuppressive mechanisms (2). The elucidation of tolerance mechanisms has important implications for development of Ag-specific immunotherapeutic strategies for autoimmune and allergic disease and allografting.…”
Section: Endritic Cells (Dcs) Comprise a Heterogeneous Group Ofmentioning
confidence: 99%