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【bio-news】七篇最热门的免疫学研究论文

七篇最热门的免疫学研究论文

Top 7 immunology papers
A snapshot of the most highly ranked articles in immunology, from Faculty of 1000

[Published 23rd November 2010 01:13 PM GMT]

By Jef Akst

1. New clue to self-tolerance
Researchers identify a new population of regulatory T cells, important players in immunological self-tolerance, which can be induced by cytokine interleukin IL-35. These iTr35 cells, which can themselves make IL-35 and initiate the production of more iTr35 cells, can suppress and regulate immune responses in a variety of pathogenic models in mice, opening up a new direction in immunology research and presenting possible therapeutic implications.

L. W. Collison, et al., "IL-35-mediated induction of a potent regulatory T cell population," Nat Immunol, 2010. Evaluated by Stephen Cobbold, University of Oxford; Stanley Perlman, University of Iowa. Free F1000 Evaluation


Neutrophil immune cell engulfing anthrax bacteria
Image: Wikimedia commons, Etxrge
2. Another route to helper T
T helper 17 cells, which are crucial for host defense and autoimmunity, can differentiate in the absence of TGF-β signaling, contrary to conventional wisdom on Th17 differentiation. Th17 cells derived without TGF-β, however, are more pathogenic, suggesting the differentiation pathways may lead to different Th17 cell types.

K. Ghoreschi, et al., "Generation of pathogenic T(H)17 cells in the absence of TGF-beta signalling," Nature, 467:967-71, 2010. Evaluated by: Wuzhou Wan and Philip Murphy, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; Jeremy McAleer and Jay Kolls, Lousianna State University Health Sciences Centre; Robert Booth, Virobay Inc. Free F1000 Evaluation

3. Natural killer cells adapt, too
In addition to their known role in the innate immune system, hepatic natural killer (NK) cells can also generate antigen-specific responses with memory that persists in the absence of the pathogens. These cells appear to act independently of T and B lymphocytes, the classical mediators of adaptive immunity, raising the interesting possibility of using NKs in vaccine development.

S. Paust, et al., "Critical role for the chemokine receptor CXCR6 in NK cell-mediated antigen-specific memory of haptens and viruses," Nat Immunol, 2010. Evaluated by: Sumi Rajagopalan and Eric Long, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; Eric Vivier, Centre d'Immunologie de Marseille-Luminy. Free F1000 Evaluation

4. Key differentiation factor elucidated

Researchers reveal details of how the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) regulates the differentiation of human regulatory T cells, and point to AhR as a potential target for mediating these cell types in autoimmune diseases.

R. Gandhi, et al., "Activation of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor induces human type 1 regulatory T cell-like and Foxp3(+) regulatory T cells," Nat Immunol, 11(9):846-53, 2010. Evaluated by: Byron Vaughn, Moritz Schmelzle and Simon Robson, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center; Ru Zhou and Rachel Caspi, National Eye Institute, NIH. Free F1000 Evaluation

5. Avoiding self destruction
A new study provides clues to how a subset of CD8+ T cells helps the immune system avoid attacking self tissues and organs during vigorous immune responses to pathogens -- they suppress the immune response via their interactions with follicular T-helper cells.

H.J. Kim, et al., "Inhibition of follicular T-helper cells by CD8(+) regulatory T cells is essential for self tolerance," Nature, 467(7313):328-32, 2010. Evaluated by: Takeshi Tsubata, Tokyo Medical and Dental University; Bryce A Binstadt, University of Minnesota. Free F1000 Evaluation

6. miRNA regulation in immunity
Researchers identify a miRNA molecule expressed in Foxp3(+) regulatory T (Treg) cells that is critical to their ability to suppress certain inflammatory responses.

L.F. Lu, et al., "Function of miR-146a in controlling Treg cell-mediated regulation of Th1 responses," Cell, 142:914-29, 2010. Evaluated by: Astar Winoto, University of California, Berkeley. Free F1000 Evaluation

7. Complement-mediated asthma
Interleukin 17A has previously been associated with severe asthma, but its exact role was unknown. In this paper, researchers detail the pathway by which IL-17A mediates severe airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) in mice, and document a novel mechanism involving IL-23 and elements of the complement system of the immune response.

S. Lajoie, et al., "Complement-mediated regulation of the IL-17A axis is a central genetic determinant of the severity of experimental allergic asthma," Nat Immunol, 11(10):928-35, 2010. Evaluated by: Thirumalai Ramalingam and Thomas Wynn, National Institutes of Health; Sarah Gaffen, University of Pittsburgh. Free F1000 Evaluation

The F1000 Top 7 is a snapshot of the highest ranked articles from a 30-day period on Faculty of 1000 Immunology, as calculated on November 19, 2010. Faculty Members evaluate and rate the most important papers in their field. To see the latest rankings, search the database, and read daily evaluations, visit

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作者:admin@医学,生命科学    2011-01-15 23:25
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