Normal human pregnancy is associated with an elevation in the immune suppressive CD25 + CD4 + regulatory T‐cell subset
Birmingham Women's Hospital · Immune Regulation (United Kingdom) · +1 more institution
Abstract
Summary CD4+ CD25+ T regulatory cells (TReg), suppress antigen-specific immune responses and are important for allograft tolerance. During pregnancy the mother tolerates an allograft expressing paternal antigens (the fetus) requiring substantial changes in immune regulation over a programmed period of time. We analysed whether immune-suppressive TReg cells were altered during pregnancy and therefore might play a part in this tolerant state. The presence of TReg cells was assessed in the blood of 25 non-pregnant, 63 pregnant and seven postnatal healthy women by flow cytometry. We observed an increase in circulating TReg cells during early pregnancy, peaking during the second trimester and then a decline…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 11.81
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 31
Authors
5- DSDavid SomersetCorresponding
Birmingham Women's Hospital
- YZYong Zheng
Immune Regulation (United Kingdom), University of Birmingham
- MDMark D. Kilby
Birmingham Women's Hospital, University of Birmingham
- DMDavid M. Sansom
Immune Regulation (United Kingdom), University of Birmingham
- MTMark T. Drayson
University of Birmingham
Topics & keywords
- IL-2 receptor
- FOXP3
- Immune system
- Immune tolerance
- Biology
- Flow cytometry
- Immunology
- Fetus
- Good health and well-being