Litcius/Paper detail

<p>GM-CSF: A Promising Target in Inflammation and Autoimmunity</p>

Ming-Chin Lee, Adrian Achuthan, John A. Hamilton

2020ImmunoTargets and Therapy136 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The cytokine, granulocyte macrophage-colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF), was firstly identified as being able to induce in vitro the proliferation and differentiation of bone marrow progenitors into granulocytes and macrophages. Much preclinical data have indicated that GM-CSF has a wide range of functions across different tissues in its action on myeloid cells, and GM-CSF deletion/depletion approaches indicate its potential as an important therapeutic target in several inflammatory and autoimmune disorders, for example, rheumatoid arthritis. In this review, we discuss briefly the biology of GM-CSF, raise some current issues and questions pertaining to this biology, summarize the results from preclinical models of a range of inflammatory and autoimmune disorders and list the latest clinical trials evaluating GM-CSF blockade in such disorders.

Topics & Concepts

Rheumatoid arthritisImmunologyGranulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factorInflammationAutoimmunityCytokineMedicineMyeloidAntibodyImmune Response and InflammationCell Adhesion Molecules ResearchImmune cells in cancer