Signaling proteins released by immune cells to coordinate inflammatory responses. They include both pro-inflammatory types such as TNF-α, IL-6, and IL-1β, and anti-inflammatory types, playing roles in both protective immunity and chronic disease.
Cytokines are small proteins acting as chemical messengers between immune cells and other body tissues. "Inflammatory cytokines" broadly refers to those involved in promoting or regulating inflammatory responses.
Pro-inflammatory cytokines — including TNF-α, IL-6, IL-1β, and HMGB1 — amplify immune responses, recruit additional immune cells, and produce systemic effects such as fever and fatigue. In the right context, this is protective: it helps the body fight infection and repair tissue.
Problems arise when cytokine-driven inflammation becomes chronic or dysregulated. Persistently elevated inflammatory cytokines are associated with autoimmune diseases, cardiovascular disease, and metabolic disorders. Measuring cytokine levels in blood or tissue is a standard method for quantifying inflammatory activity in both research and clinical practice.
The vagus nerve's cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway acts in part by suppressing production and release of key pro-inflammatory cytokines from macrophages and additional inflammatory cells.