The role of chemokines in linking innate and adaptive immunity

AD Luster - Current opinion in immunology, 2002 - Elsevier
AD Luster
Current opinion in immunology, 2002Elsevier
It is becoming clear that chemokine function is necessary to translate an innate-immune
response into an acquired response. Dendritic cells activated by innate stimuli and loaded
with foreign antigen travel to regional lymph nodes to activate the acquired-immune system.
Subsequently, the activated acquired-immune cells move into tissue, where the innate
immune system sets-off the danger signal. The chemokine system has emerged as an
essential regulator of this dendritic cell and lymphocyte trafficking, which is necessary to turn …
It is becoming clear that chemokine function is necessary to translate an innate-immune response into an acquired response. Dendritic cells activated by innate stimuli and loaded with foreign antigen travel to regional lymph nodes to activate the acquired-immune system. Subsequently, the activated acquired-immune cells move into tissue, where the innate immune system sets-off the danger signal. The chemokine system has emerged as an essential regulator of this dendritic cell and lymphocyte trafficking, which is necessary to turn an innate immune response into an adaptive response.
Elsevier