Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6125941 | Seminars in Immunology | 2011 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
During the past decade, the immunotherapeutic potential of ex vivo generated professional antigen presenting dendritic cells (DCs) has been explored in the clinic. Albeit safe, clinical results have thus far been limited. A major disadvantage of current cell-based dendritic cell (DC) therapies, preventing universal implementation of this form of immunotherapy, is the requirement that vaccines need to be tailor made for each individual. Targeted delivery of antigens to DC surface receptors in vivo would circumvent this laborious and expensive ex vivo culturing steps involved with these cell-based therapies. In addition, the opportunity to target natural and often rare DC subsets in vivo might have advantages over loading more artificial ex vivo cultured DCs. Preclinical studies show targeting antigens to DCs effectively induces humoral responses, while cellular responses are induced provided a DC maturation or activation stimulus is co-administered. Here, we discuss strategies to target antigens to distinct DC subsets and to simultaneously employ adjuvants to activate these cells to induce immunity.
Keywords
CLRR848ResiquimodRLRNLRP3NLRMPLPRRAPCFCRCDCPDCAdjuvantinterferonIFNCancerDendritic cellPlasmacytoid dendritic cellLangerhans cellconventional dendritic cellantigen presenting cellSingle chain variable fragmentMonophosphoryl lipid AImmunityTargetingVaccineFc receptorNod-like receptorMannose receptorPRR, Pattern recognition receptor
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Authors
Paul J. Tacken, Carl G. Figdor,