Ananda Shanti Mirchandani, Manuel Alejandro Sanchez-Garcia, Sarah Ruth Walmsley
{"title":"氧合如何影响免疫反应:生理缺氧和病理缺氧的新作用","authors":"Ananda Shanti Mirchandani, Manuel Alejandro Sanchez-Garcia, Sarah Ruth Walmsley","doi":"10.1038/s41577-024-01087-5","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Most eukaryotes require oxygen for their survival and, with increasing multicellular complexity, oxygen availability and delivery rates vary across the tissues of complex organisms. In humans, healthy tissues have markedly different oxygen gradients, ranging from the hypoxic environment of the bone marrow (where our haematopoietic stem cells reside) to the lungs and their alveoli, which are among the most oxygenated areas of the body. Immune cells are therefore required to adapt to varying oxygen availability as they move from the bone marrow to peripheral organs to mediate their effector functions. These changing oxygen gradients are exaggerated during inflammation, where oxygenation is often depleted owing to alterations in tissue perfusion and increased cellular activity. As such, it is important to consider the effects of oxygenation on shaping the immune response during tissue homeostasis and disease conditions. In this Review, we address the relevance of both physiological oxygenation (physioxia) and disease-associated hypoxia (where cellular oxygen demand outstrips supply) for immune cell functions, discussing the relevance of hypoxia for immune responses in the settings of tissue homeostasis, inflammation, infection, cancer and disease immunotherapy. Oxygen levels vary throughout the body and immune cells must adapt to these changes, both during homeostasis and in disease. Here, the authors discuss the impact of physiological subatmospheric oxygen levels (physioxia) as well as disease-related hypoxia on immune cell responses. They consider the therapeutic relevance of understanding how oxygenation affects immune responses in various diseases, including tuberculosis, COVID-19 and cancer.","PeriodicalId":19049,"journal":{"name":"Nature Reviews Immunology","volume":" ","pages":"1-17"},"PeriodicalIF":67.7000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"How oxygenation shapes immune responses: emerging roles for physioxia and pathological hypoxia\",\"authors\":\"Ananda Shanti Mirchandani, Manuel Alejandro Sanchez-Garcia, Sarah Ruth Walmsley\",\"doi\":\"10.1038/s41577-024-01087-5\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Most eukaryotes require oxygen for their survival and, with increasing multicellular complexity, oxygen availability and delivery rates vary across the tissues of complex organisms. In humans, healthy tissues have markedly different oxygen gradients, ranging from the hypoxic environment of the bone marrow (where our haematopoietic stem cells reside) to the lungs and their alveoli, which are among the most oxygenated areas of the body. Immune cells are therefore required to adapt to varying oxygen availability as they move from the bone marrow to peripheral organs to mediate their effector functions. These changing oxygen gradients are exaggerated during inflammation, where oxygenation is often depleted owing to alterations in tissue perfusion and increased cellular activity. As such, it is important to consider the effects of oxygenation on shaping the immune response during tissue homeostasis and disease conditions. In this Review, we address the relevance of both physiological oxygenation (physioxia) and disease-associated hypoxia (where cellular oxygen demand outstrips supply) for immune cell functions, discussing the relevance of hypoxia for immune responses in the settings of tissue homeostasis, inflammation, infection, cancer and disease immunotherapy. Oxygen levels vary throughout the body and immune cells must adapt to these changes, both during homeostasis and in disease. Here, the authors discuss the impact of physiological subatmospheric oxygen levels (physioxia) as well as disease-related hypoxia on immune cell responses. 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How oxygenation shapes immune responses: emerging roles for physioxia and pathological hypoxia
Most eukaryotes require oxygen for their survival and, with increasing multicellular complexity, oxygen availability and delivery rates vary across the tissues of complex organisms. In humans, healthy tissues have markedly different oxygen gradients, ranging from the hypoxic environment of the bone marrow (where our haematopoietic stem cells reside) to the lungs and their alveoli, which are among the most oxygenated areas of the body. Immune cells are therefore required to adapt to varying oxygen availability as they move from the bone marrow to peripheral organs to mediate their effector functions. These changing oxygen gradients are exaggerated during inflammation, where oxygenation is often depleted owing to alterations in tissue perfusion and increased cellular activity. As such, it is important to consider the effects of oxygenation on shaping the immune response during tissue homeostasis and disease conditions. In this Review, we address the relevance of both physiological oxygenation (physioxia) and disease-associated hypoxia (where cellular oxygen demand outstrips supply) for immune cell functions, discussing the relevance of hypoxia for immune responses in the settings of tissue homeostasis, inflammation, infection, cancer and disease immunotherapy. Oxygen levels vary throughout the body and immune cells must adapt to these changes, both during homeostasis and in disease. Here, the authors discuss the impact of physiological subatmospheric oxygen levels (physioxia) as well as disease-related hypoxia on immune cell responses. They consider the therapeutic relevance of understanding how oxygenation affects immune responses in various diseases, including tuberculosis, COVID-19 and cancer.
期刊介绍:
Nature Reviews Immunology is a journal that provides comprehensive coverage of all areas of immunology, including fundamental mechanisms and applied aspects. It has two international standard serial numbers (ISSN): 1474-1733 for print and 1474-1741 for online. In addition to review articles, the journal also features recent developments and new primary papers in the field, as well as reflections on influential people, papers, and events in the development of immunology. The subjects covered by Nature Reviews Immunology include allergy and asthma, autoimmunity, antigen processing and presentation, apoptosis and cell death, chemokines and chemokine receptors, cytokines and cytokine receptors, development and function of cells of the immune system, haematopoiesis, infection and immunity, immunotherapy, innate immunity, mucosal immunology and the microbiota, regulation of the immune response, signalling in the immune system, transplantation, tumour immunology and immunotherapy, and vaccine development.