4.5 Article

Emerging roles for IL-6 family cytokines as positive and negative regulators of ectopic lymphoid structures

Journal

CYTOKINE
Volume 146, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.cyto.2021.155650

Keywords

Interleukin-6; Interleukin-11; Interleukin-27; Oncostatin-M; Leukaemia inhibitory factor; Ectopic Lymphoid Structures; Tertiary Lymphoid Structures

Funding

  1. Versus Arthritis [20305, 22706]
  2. National Eye Research Centre
  3. James Tudor Foundation

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IL-6 family cytokines play important roles in regulating immune homeostasis, host defence, hematopoiesis, and development, while dysregulation of these activities may lead to autoimmunity, chronic inflammation, and cancer. Ectopic lymphoid structures (ELS) can support local antigen-specific responses and are associated with disease progression in autoimmune conditions and favorable prognosis in cancer.
IL-6 family cytokines display broad effects in haematopoietic and non-haematopoietic cells that regulate immune homeostasis, host defence, haematopoiesis, development, reproduction and wound healing. Dysregulation of these activities places this cytokine family as important mediators of autoimmunity, chronic inflammation and cancer. In this regard, ectopic lymphoid structures (ELS) are a pathological hallmark of many tissues affected by chronic disease. These inducible lymphoid aggregates form compartmentalised T cell and B cell zones, germinal centres, follicular dendritic cell networks and high endothelial venules, which are defining qualities of peripheral lymphoid organs. Accordingly, ELS can support local antigen-specific responses to self-antigens, alloantigens, pathogens and tumours. ELS often correlate with severe disease progression in autoimmune conditions, while tumour-associated ELS are associated with enhanced anti-tumour immunity and a favourable prognosis in cancer. Here, we discuss emerging roles for IL-6 family cytokines as regulators of ELS development, maintenance and activity and consider how modulation of these activities has the potential to aid the successful treatment of autoimmune conditions and cancers where ELS feature.

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