Why in the News?
Mary E. Brunkow, Fred Ramsdell and Shimon Sakaguchi have been awarded Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2025 for their discoveries concerning peripheral immune tolerance.
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- Our immune system protects the body from harmful pathogens like viruses, bacteria, and fungi.
- However, it must also make sure not to attack its own cells — this balance is very important for healthy body function.
- The immune system uses two types of tolerance to achieve this — central tolerance and peripheral tolerance.

Central Tolerance
- This process happens in the thymus, a small gland in the lymphatic system that produces and trains T cells (a type of white blood cell).
- During training, the thymus removes self-reactive T cells — these are harmful cells that could attack the body's own proteins.(see infographic)
- However, this process is not perfect. Some of these self-reactive T cells escape from the thymus and enter the body's circulation and tissues, known as the periphery.
Peripheral Tolerance

- Once in the periphery, additional control is needed to prevent escaped self-reactive T cells from attacking the body.
- Here, Regulatory T cells (Treg cells) play a key role.
- Shimon Sakaguchi discovered this special class of T cells.
- These patrolling regulatory T cells identify self-reactive T cells and stop them from attacking our own tissues.(see infographic)
- In this way, Treg cells act as a security guard, protecting the body from its own overactive immune responses.
Role of the FOXP3 Gene
- Mary Brunkow and Fred Ramsdell discovered the FOXP3 gene, which controls the development and function of regulatory T cells in human body.
- If there is a mutation in the FOXP3 gene, regulatory T cells do not form properly.
- This can cause a rare autoimmune disease called IPEX, where the immune system attacks the body's own tissues.
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Significance of the Discovery
- Treatment of Autoimmune Diseases: In autoimmune diseases the body's immune system starts to attack itself.
- In a patient suffering from such diseases, increasing the number of regulatory T cells can significantly supress the self-attacking behaviour of immune system.
- Providing Cancer Treatment: In cancer, regulatory T cells are often found in large numbers around tumours, where they suppress the activity of immune cells (like killer T cells) that would otherwise attack the cancer.
- This means too many regulatory T cells can protect the tumour, allowing it to grow. In many cancers, therapies try to reduce or block regulatory T cells inside the tumour.
- This helps free the immune system to attack and kill cancer cells more effectively
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