See no evil, hear no evil, do no evil: the lessons of immune privilege

JY Niederkorn - Nature immunology, 2006 - nature.com
Nature immunology, 2006nature.com
Immune-mediated inflammation and allograft rejection are greatly reduced in certain organs,
a phenomenon called'immune privilege'. Immune privilege is well developed in three
regions of the body: the eye, the brain and the pregnant uterus. Immune-mediated
inflammation has devastating consequences in the eye and brain, which have limited
capacity for regeneration. Likewise, loss of immune privilege at the maternal-fetal interface
culminates in abortion in rodents. However, all three regions share many adaptations that …
Abstract
Immune-mediated inflammation and allograft rejection are greatly reduced in certain organs, a phenomenon called 'immune privilege'. Immune privilege is well developed in three regions of the body: the eye, the brain and the pregnant uterus. Immune-mediated inflammation has devastating consequences in the eye and brain, which have limited capacity for regeneration. Likewise, loss of immune privilege at the maternal-fetal interface culminates in abortion in rodents. However, all three regions share many adaptations that restrict the induction and expression of immune-mediated inflammation. A growing body of evidence from rodent studies suggests that a breakdown in immune privilege contributes to multiple sclerosis, uveitis, corneal allograft rejection and possibly even immune abortion.
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