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Journal article

Evolved to protect, designed to destroy: IL-17-producing γδ T cells in infection, inflammation, and cancer

From

Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark1

T-Cell Signaling and Development, Experimental & Translational Immunology, Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark2

Experimental & Translational Immunology, Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark3

T cells of the gamma delta (γδ) lineage are evolutionary conserved from jawless to cartilaginous and bony fish to mammals and represent the “swiss army knife” of the immune system capable of antigen-dependent or independent responses, memory, antigen presentation, regulation of other lymphocytes, tissue homeostasis, and mucosal barrier maintenance, to list a few.

Over the last 10 years, γδ T cells that produce the cytokine IL-17 (γδT17) have taken a leading position in our understanding of how our immune system battles infection, inflicts tissue damage during inflammation, and gets rewired by the tumor microenvironment. A lot of what we know about γδT17 cells stems from mouse models, however, increasing evidence implicates these cells in numerous human diseases.

Herein, we aim to give an overview of the most common mouse models that have been used to study the role of γδT17 cells in infection, inflammation, and cancer, while at the same time we will evaluate evidence for their importance in humans. We hope and believe that in the next 10 years, means to take advantage of the protective and destructive properties of γδ T and in particular γδT17 cells will be part of our standard immunotherapy toolkit.

Language: English
Year: 2021
Pages: 2164-2177
ISSN: 15214141 and 00142980
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1002/eji.202049119
ORCIDs: Bekiaris, Vasileios and Agerholm, Rasmus

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