TNF-blocking therapies: an alternative mode of action?

BSW Choo-Kang, S Hutchison, MB Nickdel… - Trends in …, 2005 - cell.com
BSW Choo-Kang, S Hutchison, MB Nickdel, RV Bundick, AJ Leishman, JM Brewer…
Trends in immunology, 2005cell.com
Despite expanding use of drugs blocking tumour necrosis factor (TNF), their precise
mechanisms of action remain unclear. Early assumptions that they act by direct
neutralization of the toxic inflammatory effects of TNF might be too simplistic because they
explain neither the range of effects observed nor the varying properties of different TNF-
blocking agents. Recent studies have demonstrated a key role for mast cell-derived TNF in
the increase in lymph node size and the organizational complexity that accompanies a …
Despite expanding use of drugs blocking tumour necrosis factor (TNF), their precise mechanisms of action remain unclear. Early assumptions that they act by direct neutralization of the toxic inflammatory effects of TNF might be too simplistic because they explain neither the range of effects observed nor the varying properties of different TNF-blocking agents. Recent studies have demonstrated a key role for mast cell-derived TNF in the increase in lymph node size and the organizational complexity that accompanies a developing immune response. Regulation of this phenomenon might comprise a novel mode of action for TNF-directed therapy: by preventing this lymph node hyperplasia, TNF blockade could modulate immune responses, ameliorating pathology in autoimmune diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis.
cell.com