Fig. 2 | International Journal of Oral Science

Fig. 2

From: The cytokine network involved in the host immune response to periodontitis

Fig. 2

The cytokine network in the pathogenesis of periodontitis. In this figure, the effects of cytokines in the host immune response are shown at the level of intercellular interactions. Briefly, well-established pro-inflammatory cytokines from IL-1, IL-6 and TNF families are secreted by host periodontal cells and immunocytes after stimulation by pathobionts, which activates and recruits specific immune cell subsets and causes direct tissue damage. Then, naive T cells and B cells differentiate into mature T cells or plasma cells under the action of specific cytokines and further activate or promote other effector cells, such as osteoclasts and neutrophils, which exert pro-inflammatory or anti-inflammatory effects by secreting cell-specific cytokine clusters. Among these cell subsets, Th1 and Treg cells mainly act as protectors, while Th2/B and Th17 cells exert complex effects that may lead to tissue destruction or protection under certain circumstances (full lines: the effect of cytokines on cells and the interactions between cells; dashed lines: the secretion of cytokines)

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