The monogenic autoinflammatory diseases define new pathways in human innate immunity and inflammation
Kalpana Manthiram, Qing Zhou, Ivona Aksentijevich, Daniel L Kastner
Index: 10.1038/ni.3777
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
Autoinflammatory diseases were first recognized nearly 20 years ago as distinct clinical and immunological entities caused by dysregulation in the innate immune system. Since then, advances in genomic techniques have led to the identification of new monogenic disorders and their corresponding signaling pathways. Here we review these monogenic autoinflammatory diseases, ranging from periodic fever syndromes caused by dysregulated inflammasome-mediated production of the cytokine IL-1β to disorders arising from perturbations in signaling by the transcription factor NF-κB, ubiquitination, cytokine signaling, protein folding, type I interferon production and complement activation, and we further examine their molecular mechanisms. We also explore the overlap among autoinflammation, autoimmunity and immunodeficiency, and pose a series of unanswered questions that are expected to be central in autoinflammatory disease research in the coming decade.
Latest Articles:
A current view on inflammation
2017-07-19
[10.1038/ni.3798]
A guiding map for inflammation
2017-07-19
[10.1038/ni.3790]
Nutrition, inflammation and cancer
2017-07-19
[10.1038/ni.3754]
Regulation of inflammation by microbiota interactions with the host
2017-07-19
[10.1038/ni.3780]
Limiting inflammation—the negative regulation of NF-κB and the NLRP3 inflammasome
2017-07-19
[10.1038/ni.3772]