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Advances in the study of macrophage polarization in inflammatory immune skin diseases
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  • Tingting Xia,
  • Shengping Fu,
  • Ruilin Yang,
  • Kang Yang,
  • Wei Lei,
  • Ying Yang,
  • Qian Zhang,
  • Yujie Zhao,
  • Jiang Yu,
  • Limei Yu,
  • Tao Zhang
Tingting Xia
Affiliated Hospital of Zunyi Medical University
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Shengping Fu
Affiliated Hospital of Zunyi Medical University
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Ruilin Yang
Affiliated Hospital of Zunyi Medical University
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Kang Yang
Affiliated Hospital of Zunyi Medical University
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Wei Lei
Affiliated Hospital of Zunyi Medical University
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Ying Yang
Affiliated Hospital of Zunyi Medical University
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Qian Zhang
Zunyi Medical University
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Yujie Zhao
Affiliated Hospital of Zunyi Medical University
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Jiang Yu
Affiliated Hospital of Zunyi Medical University
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Limei Yu
Affiliated Hospital of Zunyi Medical University
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Tao Zhang
Affiliated Hospital of Zunyi Medical University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Abstract

In response to various microenvironmental stimuli, macrophages are highly plastic and primarily polarized into the pro-inflammatory M1-type and the anti-inflammatory M2-type, both of which perform almost entirely opposing functions. This characteristic determines that macrophages carry out various tasks during various stages of immunity and inflammation. An imbalance in the M1/M2 macrophage ratio is often observed in inflammatory immune skin diseases, and modulation of the macrophage polarization phenotype exacerbates or alleviates the associated symptoms. Therefore, this review presents the mechanisms of macrophage polarization, inflammation-related signaling pathways (JAK/STAT, NF-κB, PI3K/Akt) and the role of both in inflammatory immune skin diseases (psoriasis, AD, SLE, BD, etc.) with the aim of providing new directions for basic and clinical research of related diseases.