Litcius/Paper detail

The CD40-CD40L Dyad as Immunotherapeutic Target in Cardiovascular Disease

Laura A. Bosmans, Lena Bosch, Pascal Kusters, Esther Lutgens, Tom Seijkens

2020Journal of Cardiovascular Translational Research62 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chronic inflammation drives the development of atherosclerosis. Despite optimal treatment of classical cardiovascular risk factors, a substantial portion of the population has elevated inflammatory biomarkers and develops atherosclerosis-related complications, indicating that a residual inflammatory risk drives atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease in these patients. Additional anti-inflammatory therapeutic strategies are therefore required. The co-stimulatory molecule CD40 and its ligand CD40L (CD154) have a central role in the regulation of the inflammatory response during the development of atherosclerosis by modulating the interaction between immune cells and between immune cells and non-immune cells. In this review, we discuss the role of the CD40-CD40L dyad in atherosclerosis, and we discuss recent studies on the therapeutic potential of novel CD40-CD40L targeting strategies in cardiovascular medicine.

Topics & Concepts

CD154CD40InflammationImmune systemMedicineDiseaseImmunologyInternal medicineBiologyCytotoxic T cellBiochemistryIn vitroAtherosclerosis and Cardiovascular DiseasesCell Adhesion Molecules ResearchChemokine receptors and signaling