Parasitic helminths are often associated with immunoregulation, which allows them to survive in their hosts in the face of type 2 immune responses. They achieve this feat through the secretion… Click to show full abstract
Parasitic helminths are often associated with immunoregulation, which allows them to survive in their hosts in the face of type 2 immune responses. They achieve this feat through the secretion of multiple immunomodulatory factors. In this issue of EMBO Reports, Prodjinotho et al show that the parasitic cestode Taenia solium induces regulatory T‐cell responses in mice and humans through the release of the metabolic enzyme Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), which may be a conserved pathway of immunoregulation in many helminths (Prodjinotho et al, 2022).
               
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