Good News - Bad News: The Two Faces of Immune Privilege

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Rachel R. Caspi, Joan Stein-Streilein
Frontiers Media SA, Nov 19, 2014 - Immunologic diseases. Allergy - 109 pages

Immune privilege was once thought to be the property of a few select sites that include the eye, brain, testis, pregnant uterus and (of all things) the hamster cheek pouch, and was believed to be mainly based on sequestration behind blood-tissue barriers. This view has changed. Immune privilege is now considered to constitute a more general phenomenon through which tissues are able to actively direct and control immune responses taking place in their “territory” to preserve their structural and functional integrity in the face of inflammatory processes. These positive aspects of immune privilege can be hijacked by tumors to their survival advantage and to the detriment of the host. This Research Topic dissects the beneficial and deleterious consequences of immune privilege in terms of the cellular and molecular mechanisms that various tissues and tumors use, each in its own fashion, to regulate immune processes that affect them, at the local and the systemic level.

 

Contents

Immune privilege and the philosophy of immunology
4
the Yin and Yang of immune privilege in the eye
6
parallel universes or immunological plagiarism?
24
Regulation of CD8+ T cell responses to retinal antigen by local FoxP3+ regulatory T cells
34
Influence of CD8+ T regulatory cells on intraocular tumor development
46
the case of the eye
60
Manifestations of immune tolerance in the human female reproductive tract
66
Structural cellular and molecular aspects of immune privilege in the testis
80
the role of regulatory B cells in cancer
92
Altered tryptophan metabolism as a paradigm for good and bad aspects of immune privilege in chronic inflammatory diseases
96
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