Litcius/Paper detail

Treg–tissue cell interactions in repair and regeneration

Lucas F. Loffredo, Thomas Savage, Olivia R. Ringham, Nicholas Arpaia

2024The Journal of Experimental Medicine62 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Regulatory T (Treg) cells are classically known for their critical immunosuppressive functions that support peripheral tolerance. More recent work has demonstrated that Treg cells produce pro-repair mediators independent of their immunosuppressive function, a process that is critical to repair and regeneration in response to numerous tissue insults. These factors act on resident parenchymal and structural cells to initiate repair in a tissue-specific context. This review examines interactions between Treg cells and tissue-resident non-immune cells-in the context of tissue repair, fibrosis, and cancer-and discusses areas for future exploration.

Topics & Concepts

Tissue repairRegeneration (biology)Context (archaeology)Immune systemCell biologyFibrosisBiologyFunction (biology)ImmunologyCancer researchMedicinePathologyPaleontologyT-cell and B-cell ImmunologyImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesImmune Cell Function and Interaction