About this Research Topic
This highly coordinated and tightly regulated process is lost in patients with immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMIDs), where leukocytes freely enter and remained within the inflamed tissues unchecked. Whilst deleting specific leukocyte subpopulations or their cytokine products has been the focus of pharmaceutical companies, there is also a growing interest in utilizing our understanding of the leukocyte trafficking process to develop new interventions. For example, a drug that limits the movement of pathogenic effector leukocytes, whilst simultaneously allowing the movement of regulatory leukocytes has the potential to allow resolution of chronic inflammation and tissue repair. Alternatively selecting the time of day where leukocyte trafficking levels are naturally at their highest may be desirable to maximize a vaccine response.
In this Research Topic, we aim to present the latest insights into leukocyte trafficking in health, with age, and in disease; specifically highlighting those that have been translated into the clinical arena. This Research Topic will present state-of-the-art Original Research Articles, Systematic Reviews, Reviews, and Clinical Trials Articles on topics including, but not limited to, the following:
(i) New discoveries related to the glycome or lipidome that impact on leukocyte trafficking in health, with age, and in disease
(ii) Temporal analysis of leukocyte trafficking profiles in diverse tissues and organs throughout the day or the lifespan of an organism, i.e. circadian rhythm, aging
(iii) Stromal biology as a mechanism explaining leukocyte trafficking in various IMIDs, with emphasis on the clinical utility of targeting the stroma
(iv) Interdisciplinary discoveries that have been made in the leukocyte trafficking field, e.g. in the field of immunometabolism
(v) Advancements that utilize leukocyte trafficking profiles, including their cellular and molecular mechanisms, for clinical gain, e.g. new pharmacological tools or time-of-day interventions
Please note that articles on cancer are outside the scope of this Research Topic.
Dr. McGettrick receives financial support from VIATEM Ltd. The other Topic Editors declare no conflict of interest with regards to the Research Topic theme.
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.