Self and non-self discrimination is needed for the existence rather than deletion of autoimmunity: the role of regulatory T cells in protective autoimmunity |
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Authors: | M.?Schwartz mailto:michal.schwartz@weizmann.ac.il" title=" michal.schwartz@weizmann.ac.il" itemprop=" email" data-track=" click" data-track-action=" Email author" data-track-label=" " >Email author,J.?Kipnis |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Neurobiology, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel |
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Abstract: | ![]() Autoimmune T cells have been viewed for decades as an outcome of immune system malfunction, and specifically as a failure to distinguish between components of self and non-self. The need for discrimination between self and non-self as a way to avoid autoimmunity has been repeatedly debated over the years. Recent studies suggest that autoimmunity, at least in the nervous system, is the body s defense mechanism against deviations from the normal. The ability to harness neuroprotective autoimmunity upon need is evidently allowed by naturally occurring CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells, which are themselves controlled by brain-derived compounds. These findings challenge widely accepted concepts of the need for discrimination between self and non-self, as they suggest that while such discrimination is indeed required, it is needed not as a way to avoid an anti-self response but to ensure its proper regulation. Whereas a response to non-self can be self-limited by a decreased presence of the relevant antigen, the response to self needs a mechanism for strict control, such as that provided by the naturally occurring regulatory T cells.Received 8 June 2004; accepted 6 July 2004 |
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Keywords: | Protective autoimmunity neurodegeneration autoimmune diseases CD4+ CD25+ regulatory T cells CNS injuries |
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