Litcius/Paper detail

Antigen transfer and its effect on vaccine-induced immune amplification and tolerance

Yingying Shi, Yichao Lu, Jian You

2022Theranostics25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Antigen transfer refers to the process of intercellular information exchange, where antigenic components including nucleic acids, antigen proteins/peptides and peptide-major histocompatibility complexes (p-MHCs) are transmitted from donor cells to recipient cells at the thymus, secondary lymphoid organs (SLOs), intestine, allergic sites, allografts, pathological lesions and vaccine injection sites via trogocytosis, gap junctions, tunnel nanotubes (TNTs), or extracellular vesicles (EVs). In the context of vaccine inoculation, antigen transfer is manipulated by the vaccine type and administration route, which consequently influences, even alters the immunological outcome, i.e., immune amplification and tolerance. Mainly focused on dendritic cells (DCs)-based antigen receptors, this review systematically introduces the biological process, molecular basis and clinical manifestation of antigen transfer.

Topics & Concepts

AntigenImmune systemContext (archaeology)ImmunologyMajor histocompatibility complexBiologyAdoptive cell transferCell biologyChemistryT cellPaleontologyImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesRNA Interference and Gene DeliverySARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research