The great scientific progress in our understanding of the genetics, chemistry, biology and pathophysiology of the cytokines has made clear the need for a comprehensive discussion of these molecules as part of a unified system. The Cytokine Network and Immune Functions provides just such a treatment. It represents the efforts of many of the most prominent scientists studying these molecules. Not only does it present a general discussion of each of the major cytokines or setsof cytokines; it deals in detail with how these molecules affect all aspects of immune function, and how they contribute to a wide range of pathological conditions. As the title clearly indicates, this book does not treat individual cytokines in isolation; it recognizes that they act in a complex web ofsynergistic and counter-regulatory effects so as to provide opportunities for the very fine control of immune responses. Cytokine biology is not only a fascinating scientific discipline, giving insight into how the immune and inflammatory systems are linked and regulated, but also it is a subject of profound importance in modern medicine. As the chapters in the section of this book entitled Cytokines in Pathology indicate, virtually all insults to the organism, be they r ste or chronic, callupon cytokine responses and virtually every disease entity has a component involving the function of cytokines. In some diseases, such as allergy and asthma and many of the autoimmune disorders, abnormal cytokine responses are at the very heart of the disease process; in others, their impact may bemore peripheral. There can be no doubt, however, that the study of cytokine biology has contributed greatly to the growing power of molecular medicine, transforming our approach to disease and building a new armamentarium of drugs and other treatments that promise to revolutionize our capacity to control a wide range of disease states.
Foreword; Overview:: General aspects of cytokine properties and functions; CYTOKINES AND THEIR RECEPTORS:: MOLECULAR ASPECTS; I - Interleukins 2, 4, 7, 9, 13 and 15; II - The Interleukin 6 family of cytokines and their receptors; III - Interleukin 10; IV - The Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) family and related molecules; V- The Interleukin 1 system; VI - Interleukin 12; VII - Transforming growth factor; VIII - The interferons:: biochemistry and biology; IX - Chemokines; X - Cytokines and haematopoeisis; XI - Interleukins 16, 17 and 18; XII - Mechanisms of signal transduction; XIII - Regulation of lymphokinegene expression; CYTOKINES AND IMMUNE FUNCTIONS; XIV - Cytokines in the development of lymphocytes; XV - Cytokines in the functions of dendritic cells, monocytes, macrophages and fibroblasts; XVI - Cytokines in T-cell responses; XVII - Regulation of humoral immunity by cytokines; XVIII - Cytokines and the cellular mechanism of inflammation; XIX - Cytokines in the brain; XX - Deregulated immune responses in cytokine and cytokine receptor transgenic and knockout mice; CYTOKINES IN PATHOLOGY; XXIII - Cytokines and chemokines in acquired immunodeficiencies; XXIV - Allergic responses and cytokines; XXV - Cytokines in organ transplantation; XXVI - Cytokines and autoimmunity; XXVII - Cytokine antagonists and autoimmunity; XXVIII - Cytokines in cancer; XXIX - Immunotherapy, gene therapy, cytokines and cancer;
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