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Tissue-resident innate immunity in the lung

Journal

IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 159, Issue 3, Pages 245-256

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/imm.13143

Keywords

innate; lung; tissue-resident

Categories

Funding

  1. [210662/Z/18/Z]

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The lung is a unique organ that must protect against inhaled pathogens and toxins, without mounting a disproportionate response against harmless particulate matter and without compromising its vital function. Tissue-resident immune cells within the lung provide local immunity and protection from infection but are also responsible for causing disease when dysregulated. There is a growing appreciation of the importance of tissue-resident memory T cells to lung immunity, but non-recirculating, tissue-resident, innate immune cells also exist. These cells provide the first line of defence against pulmonary infection and are essential for co-ordinating the subsequent adaptive response. In this review, we discuss the main lung-resident innate immune subsets and their functions in common pulmonary diseases, such as influenza, bacterial pneumonia, asthma and inflammatory disorders.

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