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Regulatory T cells in parasite infections: susceptibility, specificity and specialisation

Caitlin M. McManus, Rick M. Maizels

2023Trends in Parasitology32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are essential to control immune system responses to innocuous self-specificities, intestinal and environmental antigens. However, they may also interfere with immunity to parasites, particularly in chronic infection. Susceptibility to many parasite infections is, to a greater or lesser extent, controlled by Tregs, but often they play a more prominent role in moderating the immunopathological consequences of parasitism, and dampening bystander reactions in an antigen-nonspecific manner. More recently, Treg subtypes have been defined which may preferentially act in different contexts; we also discuss the degree to which this specialisation is now being mapped onto how Tregs maintain the delicate balance between tolerance, immunity, and pathology in infection.

Topics & Concepts

ImmunologyImmunityImmune systemBiologyBystander effectAntigenParasite hostingComputer scienceWorld Wide WebParasites and Host InteractionsParasitic Diseases Research and TreatmentParasitic Infections and Diagnostics
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