How the fetal 'allograft' avoids rejection during pregnancy remains a major unresolved immunological paradox. Recent work has suggested that fetomaternal tolerance is in fact maintained by a number of redundant mechanisms, but their relative importance has remained poorly defined. In this paper, I discuss an emerging controversy regarding the ability of maternal T cells to mediate fetal rejection at a time when they appear to be ignorant of fetal and placental antigens. This paradox within a paradox highlights two major research directions in the field of reproductive immunology that, when ultimately reconciled, promise to give significant insight into mechanisms of impaired fertility and compromised fetal and maternal health.
Copyright 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.