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TRR 156:  The skin as sensor and effector orchestrating local and systemic immunity

Subject Area Medicine
Term since 2015
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Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 246807620
 
As one of our largest organs, the skin is a vital barrier against environmental pressures and forms, together with the lung and gut, the hosts’ external frontier to the environment. The main challenge in the study of skin immunology is to understand the mechanisms that regulate the cross talk between the various host and microbial cellular components of the skin, and how a perturbation of this communication contributes to altered cutaneous immune responses and to the pathogenesis of inflammatory skin diseases. Also, we are just beginning to understand how skin immune reactions affect – and are affected by - systemic immunity. The goal of this consortium, which is unique in its focus and composition worldwide, is to understand skin immunity in its complexity (as sensor, effector and orchestrator of skin and systemic immune reactions) to generate the basis for future therapies. To achieve this goal, dermatologists, immunologists, microbiologists, pharmacologists and biochemists work together in a unique consortium to gain a better understanding of the complexity of the skin immune system. The second funding period was used to consolidate and concentrate the joint research efforts by especially focussing on the skin microbiome, the interactions between the skin immune system and systemic immunity, as well as by concentrating on inflammatory disease models with a focus on psoriasis. This focus resulted in a considerable number of joint publications that were only made possible by the strong scientific interaction and collaboration within this transregional collaborative research center. It remains the twelve-year-long term vision of TRR156 to study and better understand complex skin immune reactions and to provide translational knowledge for improved therapies for our patients.
DFG Programme CRC/Transregios

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Participating University Universität Münster
Participating Institution Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin
 
 

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