Maintaining immune tolerance is a dynamic biological process which is provided by various types of tolerance mechanisms. In the light of the remarkable role of co-inhibitory receptors for switching-off the immune system, the potential impact of these receptors in controlling auto-reactivity is needed to be interrogated. Recent investigations suggested that sustained expression of co-inhibitory receptors in chronic immune responses including cancer and chronic infections can result in immunological consequences called exhaustion. Because of the co-inhibitory receptors, exhaustion confers a potent "switch-off" mechanism for immune response. Using both co-inhibitory receptors and transcription factors in controlling T cells behavior, this review provide an overview of the potential effects of co-inhibitory receptors in maintaining tolerance and discuss how impaired co-inhibitory receptors might results in autoimmunity.
Keywords: Autoimmunity; Co-inhibitory receptors; Exhaustion; T cells; Tolerance; Transcription factors.
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