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Publication : Chemokines: key players in innate and adaptive immunity.

First Author  Esche C Year  2005
Journal  J Invest Dermatol Volume  125
Issue  4 Pages  615-28
PubMed ID  16185259 Mgi Jnum  J:101315
Mgi Id  MGI:3603738 Doi  10.1111/j.0022-202X.2005.23841.x
Citation  Esche C, et al. (2005) Chemokines: key players in innate and adaptive immunity. J Invest Dermatol 125(4):615-28
abstractText  Healthy individuals initiate an immediate immune response to microbes by using a set of germline-encoded receptors that recognize common molecular patterns found on the surface of pathogens that are distinct from self-antigens. This innate immune response is the first line of defense against microorganisms in vertebrates, and constitutes the only immune response in plants and invertebrates. The innate immune system includes cellular components, as well as a host of soluble products (antimicrobial peptides, complement fragments, cytokines, and chemokines). The adaptive immune response, which provides long-lasting protection, takes days to develop and requires somatic mutations leading to the development of antigen-specific T cell receptors (cell-mediated immunity) and immunoglobulins (humoral immunity). Members of the chemokine superfamily are crucially involved in both innate and adaptive responses. We review the biological actions of the chemokine superfamily, focusing on several functions that are relevant for both immune responses, such as cell recruitment, microbicidal activity, cell activation, polarization of CD4+ T cells, and effects on structural cells. In particular, we will illustrate the central role that chemokines play in host defense, best demonstrated by the tremendous number of chemokine and chemokine receptor homologs found in microbial genomes, which deflect the immune response of the host.
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