Paradoxical aspects of rapamycin immunobiology in transplantation.

Rapamycin has long been considered an immunosuppressive agent due to its antiproliferative effects on immune cells, and is currently used as a component of antirejection regimens in transplantation. Despite the large number of mechanistic and clinical studies investigating the impact of rapamycin on...

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Hlavní autoři: Ferrer, I, Araki, K, Ford, M
Médium: Journal article
Jazyk:English
Vydáno: 2011
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author Ferrer, I
Araki, K
Ford, M
author_facet Ferrer, I
Araki, K
Ford, M
author_sort Ferrer, I
collection OXFORD
description Rapamycin has long been considered an immunosuppressive agent due to its antiproliferative effects on immune cells, and is currently used as a component of antirejection regimens in transplantation. Despite the large number of mechanistic and clinical studies investigating the impact of rapamycin on cell-mediated immunity, several paradoxes concerning rapamycin immunobiology remain. In particular, emerging evidence suggests that under certain circumstances rapamycin can exert immunostimulatory effects, boosting T cell responses in the face of pathogen infections and vaccines. Here, we review recent findings concerning the contradictory outcomes of rapamycin induced mTOR inhibition on CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell responses in transplantation and protective immunity. These studies suggest that the conditions under which T cells are stimulated can profoundly modify the impact of rapamycin on antigen-specific T cell responses. Thus, further investigation into the cellular and molecular pathways underlying the dichotomous effects of rapamycin in transplantation is required to harness the full potential of this immunomodulatory agent to promote graft survival and maximize protective immunity.
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spelling oxford-uuid:6ec935f0-4327-48ed-8c36-264fa8a9d4a92022-03-26T19:26:38ZParadoxical aspects of rapamycin immunobiology in transplantation.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:6ec935f0-4327-48ed-8c36-264fa8a9d4a9EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2011Ferrer, IAraki, KFord, MRapamycin has long been considered an immunosuppressive agent due to its antiproliferative effects on immune cells, and is currently used as a component of antirejection regimens in transplantation. Despite the large number of mechanistic and clinical studies investigating the impact of rapamycin on cell-mediated immunity, several paradoxes concerning rapamycin immunobiology remain. In particular, emerging evidence suggests that under certain circumstances rapamycin can exert immunostimulatory effects, boosting T cell responses in the face of pathogen infections and vaccines. Here, we review recent findings concerning the contradictory outcomes of rapamycin induced mTOR inhibition on CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell responses in transplantation and protective immunity. These studies suggest that the conditions under which T cells are stimulated can profoundly modify the impact of rapamycin on antigen-specific T cell responses. Thus, further investigation into the cellular and molecular pathways underlying the dichotomous effects of rapamycin in transplantation is required to harness the full potential of this immunomodulatory agent to promote graft survival and maximize protective immunity.
spellingShingle Ferrer, I
Araki, K
Ford, M
Paradoxical aspects of rapamycin immunobiology in transplantation.
title Paradoxical aspects of rapamycin immunobiology in transplantation.
title_full Paradoxical aspects of rapamycin immunobiology in transplantation.
title_fullStr Paradoxical aspects of rapamycin immunobiology in transplantation.
title_full_unstemmed Paradoxical aspects of rapamycin immunobiology in transplantation.
title_short Paradoxical aspects of rapamycin immunobiology in transplantation.
title_sort paradoxical aspects of rapamycin immunobiology in transplantation
work_keys_str_mv AT ferreri paradoxicalaspectsofrapamycinimmunobiologyintransplantation
AT arakik paradoxicalaspectsofrapamycinimmunobiologyintransplantation
AT fordm paradoxicalaspectsofrapamycinimmunobiologyintransplantation