Resolution of acute inflammation in the lung

BD Levy, CN Serhan - Annual review of physiology, 2014 - annualreviews.org
BD Levy, CN Serhan
Annual review of physiology, 2014annualreviews.org
Acute inflammation in the lung is essential to health. So too is its resolution. In response to
invading microbes, noxious stimuli, or tissue injury, an acute inflammatory response is
mounted to protect the host. To limit inflammation and prevent collateral injury of healthy,
uninvolved tissue, the lung orchestrates the formation of specialized proresolving mediators,
specifically lipoxins, resolvins, protectins, and maresins. These immunoresolvents are
agonists for resolution that interact with specific receptors on leukocytes and structural cells …
Acute inflammation in the lung is essential to health. So too is its resolution. In response to invading microbes, noxious stimuli, or tissue injury, an acute inflammatory response is mounted to protect the host. To limit inflammation and prevent collateral injury of healthy, uninvolved tissue, the lung orchestrates the formation of specialized proresolving mediators, specifically lipoxins, resolvins, protectins, and maresins. These immunoresolvents are agonists for resolution that interact with specific receptors on leukocytes and structural cells to blunt further inflammation and promote catabasis. This process appears to be defective in several common lung diseases that are characterized by excess or chronic inflammation. Here, we review the molecular and cellular effectors of resolution of acute inflammation in the lung.
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