Projects per year
Abstract
The past 20 years have seen the definition of human monogenic disorders and their autoimmune phenocopies underlying either defective or enhanced type I interferon (IFN) activity. These disorders delineate the impact of type I IFNs in natural conditions and demonstrate that only a narrow window of type I IFN activity is beneficial. Insufficient type I IFN predisposes humans to life-threatening viral diseases (albeit unexpectedly few) with a central role in immunity to respiratory and cerebral viral infection. Excessive type I IFN, perhaps counterintuitively, appears to underlie a greater number of autoinflammatory and/or autoimmune conditions known as type I interferonopathies, whose study has revealed multiple molecular programs involved in the induction of type I IFN signaling. These observations suggest that the manipulation of type I IFN activity to within a physiological range may be clinically relevant for the prevention and treatment of viral and inflammatory diseases.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Journal | Science Immunology |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 5 Jul 2024 |
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Human life within a narrow range: the lethal ups and downs of type I interferons'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Active
-
Genetic disorders of human neurological and immune function
Crow, Y. (Principal Investigator)
1/04/23 → 31/03/28
Project: Research
Datasets
-
Categorisation of monogenic disorders: Underlying a deficit of type I IFN activity / observed type I IFN signalling upregulation
Crow, Y. (Creator) & Unit, M. H. G. (Contributor), Dryad, 28 May 2024
Dataset