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Original

Stress Proteins as Inducers and Targets of Regulatory T Cells in Arthritis

, , , , , , & show all
Pages 181-197 | Published online: 03 Aug 2009
 

Abstract

Immunization with microbial or mammalian stress proteins or heat-shock proteins in models of experimental autoimmunity has been observed to lead to increased disease resistance. Furthermore, such immunization has been proposed to result in the induction and expansion of T cells that suppress disease upon transfer. Comparisons of microbial heat-shock proteins with other conserved immunogenic proteins of bacterial origin have indicated a unique capacity for heat-shock proteins to induce a regulatory phenotype in T cells, such as reflected by the production of IL10. Also, studies in children with chronic arthritis have indicated that T-cell responses to heat-shock proteins are associated with a benign course of the disease and with remission. Furthermore, in patients, heat-shock-protein-(HSP-) activated T cells were shown to display regulatory phenotypes consistent with CD4+CD25+ T regulatory cells.

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