Immune Tolerance Regulation Is Critical to Immune Homeostasis

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Abstract

The body’s immune response plays a critical role in defending against external or foreign antigens while also preserving tolerance to self-antigens. This equilibrium, referred to as immune homeostasis, is paramount for overall health. The regulatory mechanisms governing the maintenance of this delicate immune balance are notably complex. It is currently accepted that immune tolerance is a dynamic outcome regulated by multiple factors, including central and peripheral mechanisms. Its induction or elimination plays a significant role in autoimmune diseases, organ transplantation, and cancer therapy, markedly impacting various major diseases in modern clinical practice. Overall, our current understanding of immune tolerance is still very limited. In this review article, we summarized the main mechanisms that have been known to mediate immune tolerance so far, including endogenous immune tolerance, adaptive immune tolerance, other immune tolerance mechanisms, and the homeostasis of immune tolerance, identified the key factors that regulate immune tolerance, and provided new clues for immune system recovery in many autoimmune diseases, organ transplantation, and tumor therapy.

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Han, L., Wu, T., Zhang, Q., Qi, A., & Zhou, X. (2025). Immune Tolerance Regulation Is Critical to Immune Homeostasis. Journal of Immunology Research. John Wiley and Sons Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1155/jimr/5006201

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