About this Research Topic
Along with the recent progress, efforts have been devoted to investigating the immunoregulation of metalloproteinases in chronic inflammatory diseases using techniques such as single-cell sequencing, spatial transcriptomic analysis, whole-genome sequencing, and targeted sequencing. A range of metalloproteinase-targeting compounds in the forms of therapeutic drugs and imaging probes have also been developed. However, this research field is still in its infancy stage and further research work is needed. The aim of this special issue is to explore the immunoregulatory function and mechanism of metalloproteinases in chronic inflammatory diseases, as well as the potential of using metalloproteinase-targeting compounds for the treatment and/or diagnosis of chronic inflammatory diseases, especially cancer, inflammatory bowel disease, rheumatism, and so on.
This special issue aims to present state-of-the-art research that uncovers the immunoregulatory roles, functions, and mechanism of actions of metalloproteinases in chronic inflammatory diseases, as well as the uses of metalloproteinase-targeting compounds as new approaches for the treatment of chronic inflammatory diseases.
The special issue will comprise a selection of Original Research articles, Methods, and Reviews. We welcome the potential subjects include, but are not limited to, the following subtopics:
(1) Immunomodulatory roles, functions, and mechanisms of metalloproteinases in chronic inflammatory diseases and the signal transduction pathways involved.
(2) Construction of cellular network map to study the contribution of metalloenzymes to susceptibility and disease progression in chronic inflammatory diseases.
(3) Metalloproteinase as modulators of innate immunity and chronic inflammation.
(4) Metalloproteinase-targeting compounds as immunomodulators for the treatment of chronic inflammatory diseases.
(5) Metalloproteinase-targeting/responsive compounds as imaging probes to study the immunoactivity of metalloproteinase in chronic inflammatory diseases.
(6) Other topics related to the relationship between metalloproteinase, innate immunity, and chronic inflammation are also welcome.
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.