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Sarcoidosis is a mysterious, long-recognized disease characterized by the formation of tuberculosis-like granulomas in the lungs. The mystery of sarcoidosis stems from both its unknown etiology and its paradoxical effects on the immune system. The disease has been attributed to a hyperactivation of CD4+ T helper type 1 cells that infiltrate the lungs but, in patients with sarcoidosis, these very cells fail to proliferate in response to recall antigens.
Regulatory T cells (red), shown in a sarcoidosis granuloma, inhibit T cell proliferation, but not their cytokine production.
On page 359, Miyara and colleagues suggest that half-cocked regulatory T (T reg) cells that inhibit proliferation by T cells but not their cytokine production might be to blame for this immune contradiction.
T reg cells normally help suppress chronic inflammation by inhibiting both effector T cell proliferation and cytokine production. Miyara et al. now show...
The Rockefeller University Press
2006
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