Litcius/Paper detail

The ins and outs of innate and adaptive type 2 immunity

Ari B. Molofsky, Richard M. Locksley

2023Immunity62 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

helper type 2 cells, and elaborated by myeloid cells and antibodies that accumulate in response. Here, we review the cytokine and cellular circuits that mediate type 2 immunity. Building from insights in cytokine evolution, we propose that innate type 2 immunity evolved to monitor the status of microbe-rich epithelial barriers (outside) and sterile parenchymal borders (inside) to meet the functional demands of local tissue, and, when necessary, to relay information to the adaptive immune system to reinforce demarcating borders to sustain these efforts. Allergic pathology likely results from deviations in local sustaining units caused by alterations imposed by environmental effects during postnatal developmental windows and exacerbated by mutations that increase vulnerabilities. This framework positions T2 immunity as central to sustaining tissue repair and regeneration and provides a context toward understanding allergic disease.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyAcquired immune systemInnate immune systemImmunityInnate lymphoid cellImmunologyImmune systemIL-33, ST2, and ILC PathwaysImmune Cell Function and InteractionEosinophilic Esophagitis