Background
Type: Note

The effect of antigen dose on T cell-targeting vaccine outcome

Journal: Human Vaccines and Immunotherapeutics (21645515)Year: 2019/02/01Volume: 15Issue: 2Pages: 407 - 411
Billeskov, RolfBeikzadeh B.aBerzofsky, Jay A.
GreenDOI:10.1080/21645515.2018.1527496Language: English

Abstract

During the past 3–4 decades, an increasing amount of evidence has pointed to the complex role of the antigen dose or T cell receptor (TCR) stimulation strength on the subsequent type, duration and “flavor” or quality of the response. Antigen dose was initially shown to impact Th1/Th2 bias, and later also shown to differentially affect development and induction of Tregs, Th17, T-follicular helper (Tfh), cells, and others. In recent years the quality of both CD4/8 T cells during infections, cancer and/or autoimmunity has turned out to be critical for subsequent disease outcome. Importantly, different vaccination strategies also lead to different types of T cell responses, and the role of the antigen dose is emerging as an important factor as well as a tool for investigators to utilize in fine-tuning vaccine efficacy. This commentary will highlight essential background of how antigen dose can impact and affect the quality of T cell responses, and discuss how this translates in different vaccine settings. © 2018, © 2018 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.


Author Keywords

Antigen doseinfectious immunityprotectionstimulation strengthT cellT cell receptorvaccine

Other Keywords

AnimalsAntigensDose-Response Relationship, ImmunologicHumansReceptors, Antigen, T-CellT-LymphocytesVaccinationVaccinesantigencytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen 4early secretory antigenic target 6Fas antibodyinterleukin 15programmed death 1 receptorT lymphocyte receptorvaccineviral proteinlymphocyte antigen receptorantibody productionantibody responseantigen presenting cellapoptosisautoimmune diseaseautoimmunitybinding affinityCD4+ T lymphocyteCD8+ T lymphocytecell differentiationcell interactioncell proliferationcellular immunityclinical outcomedrug developmentdrug efficacydrug sensitivityhumanhumoral immunityimmune responseimmunizationmajor histocompatibility complexmemory cellnonhumanNotephenotyperegulatory T lymphocytesignal transductionT lymphocyteT lymphocyte activationTfh cellTh1 Th2 balanceTh17 cellviral clearancevirus infectionanimalclassificationdose responseimmunology