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Epigenetic regulation of T cell adaptive immunity

Adolfo B. Frias, Shannon K. Boi, Xin Lan, Ben Youngblood

2021Immunological Reviews40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The conceptualization of adaptive immunity, founded on the observation of immunological memory, has served as the basis for modern vaccination and immunotherapy approaches. This fundamental concept has allowed immunologists to explore mechanisms that enable humoral and cellular lymphocytes to tailor immune response functions to a wide array of environmental insults and remain poised for future pathogenic encounters. Until recently, for T cells it has remained unclear how memory differentiation acquires and sustains a gene expression program that grants a cell with a capacity for a heightened recall response. Recent investigations into this critical question have identified epigenetic programs as a causal molecular mechanism governing T cell subset specification and immunological memory. Here, we outline the studies that have illustrated this concept and posit on how insights into T cell adaptive immunity can be applied to improve upon existing immunotherapies.

Topics & Concepts

EpigeneticsBiologyConceptualizationAcquired immune systemImmunologyImmunityImmunotherapyImmune systemMechanism (biology)Cellular immunityNeuroscienceComputational biologyGeneGeneticsComputer sciencePhilosophyArtificial intelligenceEpistemologyImmune Cell Function and InteractionEpigenetics and DNA MethylationT-cell and B-cell Immunology
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