The immune system has evolved to protect multicellular organisms from the attack of a variety of pathogens. To exert this function efficiently, thesystemhas developed the capacity to coordinate the function of different cell types and the ability to down-modulate the response when the foreign attack is over. For decades, immunologists believed that these two characteristics were primarily related to cytokine/chemokine-based communication and cell-to-cell direct contact. More recently, it has been shown that immune cells also communicate by transferring regulatory RNAs, microRNAsin particular, from one cell to the other. Several studies have suggested a functional role of extracellular regulatory RNAs in cell-to-cellcommunicationin different cellular contexts. This minireview focuses on the potential role of extracellularRNAtransfer in the regulation of adaptive immune response, also contextualizing it in a broader field of what is known of cell-free RNAs in communication among different organisms in the evolutionary scale.

De Candia, P., De Rosa, V., Casiraghi, M., Matarese, G. (2016). Extracellular RNAs: A secret arm of immune system regulation. THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 291(14), 7221-7228 [10.1074/jbc.R115.708842].

Extracellular RNAs: A secret arm of immune system regulation

CASIRAGHI, MAURIZIO
Penultimo
;
2016

Abstract

The immune system has evolved to protect multicellular organisms from the attack of a variety of pathogens. To exert this function efficiently, thesystemhas developed the capacity to coordinate the function of different cell types and the ability to down-modulate the response when the foreign attack is over. For decades, immunologists believed that these two characteristics were primarily related to cytokine/chemokine-based communication and cell-to-cell direct contact. More recently, it has been shown that immune cells also communicate by transferring regulatory RNAs, microRNAsin particular, from one cell to the other. Several studies have suggested a functional role of extracellular regulatory RNAs in cell-to-cellcommunicationin different cellular contexts. This minireview focuses on the potential role of extracellularRNAtransfer in the regulation of adaptive immune response, also contextualizing it in a broader field of what is known of cell-free RNAs in communication among different organisms in the evolutionary scale.
Articolo in rivista - Review Essay
Cell-free RNAs; RNA; T cells; Treg cells; cellular immune response; extracellular vesicles; immune system; lymphocyte; nucleic acid; Adaptive Immunity; Animals; Cell Communication; Humans; MicroRNAs; Biochemistry; Molecular Biology; Cell Biology
English
2016
2016
291
14
7221
7228
reserved
De Candia, P., De Rosa, V., Casiraghi, M., Matarese, G. (2016). Extracellular RNAs: A secret arm of immune system regulation. THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 291(14), 7221-7228 [10.1074/jbc.R115.708842].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/153259
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