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      The interleukins of fish

      Secombes, Christopher J.; Wang, Tiehui; Bird, Steve
      DOI
       10.1016/j.dci.2011.05.001
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      Secombes, C. J., Wang, T., & Bird, S. (2011). The interleukins of fish. Developmental & Comparative Immunology, 35(12), 1336-1345.
      Permanent Research Commons link: https://hdl.handle.net/10289/7492
      Abstract
      Interleukins are a subgroup of cytokines, molecules involved in the intercellular regulation of the immune system. The term interleukin was first coined in 1979 to refer to molecules that signal between different leucocyte types, although not exclusively restricted to leucocyte communication. Whilst it is now known that interleukins are produced by a wide variety of cell types, nevertheless many are synthesised by CD4+ T helper cells, macrophages/monocytes and endothelial cells. The nomenclature is relatively straightforward, with interleukin 1 the first discovered and interleukin 2 the second, etc. However, whilst 35 interleukins are currently described in mammals, several are in fact terms referring to subfamilies of more molecules, as with the IL-1 family where 11 members (IL-1F1–IL-1F11) are present, and the IL-17 family where 6 members (IL-17A–IL-17F) are present. So the total is much higher and splice variants and allelic variation increase this diversity further. This review will focus on what is known about interleukins in fish, and will refer to the major subfamilies rather than try to work through 35 descriptions in a row. It is clear that many direct homologues of molecules known in mammals are present in fish, but that not all are present and some novel interleukins exist that may have arisen from fish specific gene duplication events.
      Date
      2011
      Type
      Journal Article
      Publisher
      Elsevier
      Collections
      • Science and Engineering Papers [3124]
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