Helminth immunoregulation: The role of parasite secreted proteins in modulating host immunity
Centre for Immunity, Infection and Evolution · University of Edinburgh
Abstract
Helminths are masterful immunoregulators. A characteristic feature of helminth infection is a Th2-dominated immune response, but stimulation of immunoregulatory cell populations, such as regulatory T cells and alternatively activated macrophages, is equally common. Typically, Th1/17 immunity is blocked and productive effector responses are muted, allowing survival of the parasite in a "modified Th2" environment. Drug treatment to clear the worms reverses the immunoregulatory effects, indicating that a state of active suppression is maintained by the parasite. Hence, research has focussed on "excretory-secretory" products released by live parasites, which can interfere with every aspect of host immunity from…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 25.86
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 178
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Effector
- Immune system
- Immunity
- Immunology
- Helminths
- Parasite hosting
- Stimulation
- Good health and well-being