4.7 Review

Inflammation: A New Look at an Old Problem

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23094596

Keywords

general pathological process; inflammation; systemic inflammation; cellular stress; tissue stress; evolution of inflammation; neurodegeneration; atherosclerosis; tumors

Funding

  1. Government contract of the Institute of Immunology and Physiology [122020900136-4]

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Pro-inflammatory stress is inherent in damaged or threatened cells and is defined by various components. The microvascular inflammatory response plays a key role in the development of classical inflammatory foci, which can also lead to systemic inflammation. The division of inflammation into different variants has evolutionary roots.
Pro-inflammatory stress is inherent in any cells that are subject to damage or threat of damage. It is defined by a number of universal components, including oxidative stress, cellular response to DNA damage, unfolded protein response to mitochondrial and endoplasmic reticulum stress, changes in autophagy, inflammasome formation, non-coding RNA response, formation of an inducible network of signaling pathways, and epigenetic changes. The presence of an inducible receptor and secretory phenotype in many cells is the cause of tissue pro-inflammatory stress. The key phenomenon determining the occurrence of a classical inflammatory focus is the microvascular inflammatory response (exudation, leukocyte migration to the alteration zone). This same reaction at the systemic level leads to the development of life-critical systemic inflammation. From this standpoint, we can characterize the common mechanisms of pathologies that differ in their clinical appearance. The division of inflammation into alternative variants has deep evolutionary roots. Evolutionary aspects of inflammation are also described in the review. The aim of the review is to provide theoretical arguments for the need for an up-to-date theory of the relationship between key human pathological processes based on the integrative role of the molecular mechanisms of cellular and tissue pro-inflammatory stress.

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