Linking vaccine adjuvant mechanisms of action to function
Massachusetts Institute of Technology · Scripps Research Institute · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Vaccines deliver an immunogen in a manner designed to safely provoke an immune response, leading to the generation of memory T and B cells and long-lived antibody-producing plasma cells. Adjuvants play a critical role in vaccines by controlling how the immune system is exposed to the immunogen and providing inflammatory cues that enable productive immune priming. However, mechanisms of action underlying adjuvant function at the molecular, cell, and tissue levels are diverse and often poorly understood. Here, we review the current understanding of mechanisms of action underlying adjuvants used in subunit protein/polysaccharide vaccines and mRNA vaccines, discuss where possible how these mechanisms of action…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 31.89
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 153
Authors
4- EBElana Ben‐AkivaCorresponding
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- APAsheley P. Chapman
Scripps Research Institute, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- TMTianyang Mao
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- DJDarrell J. Irvine
Broad Institute, Scripps Research Institute, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Topics & keywords
- Immunogen
- Immune system
- Adjuvant
- Biology
- Immunology
- Priming (agriculture)
- Antibody
- Computational biology
- Good health and well-being