Toll or Toll-Free Adjuvant Path Toward the Optimal Vaccine Development
- 17 March 2007
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Clinical Immunology
- Vol. 27 (4) , 363-371
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s10875-007-9087-x
Abstract
Successful vaccines contain an adjuvant component that activates the innate immune system, thereby eliciting antigen-specific immune responses. Many adjuvants appear to be ligands for toll-like receptors (TLR), which are thus promising targets for the development of novel adjuvants to elicit vaccine immunogenicity. However, recent evidence suggests that some adjuvants activate the innate immune system in a TLR-independent manner possibly through other pattern recognition receptors and signaling machinery. In particular, newly identified intracellular retinoic-acid-inducible gene (RIG)-like receptors, NOD-like receptors, or even as yet unknown recognition machinery for the adjuvant may regulate TLR-independent vaccine immunogenicity. To develop optimal vaccines, it will be critical to understand how TLR-dependent and TLR-independent innate immune activation, by various adjuvants, control the consequent adaptive immune responses to vaccine.Keywords
This publication has 101 references indexed in Scilit:
- 5'-Triphosphate RNA Is the Ligand for RIG-IScience, 2006
- On regulation of phagosome maturation and antigen presentationNature Immunology, 2006
- Essential role of mda-5 in type I IFN responses to polyriboinosinic:polyribocytidylic acid and encephalomyocarditis picornavirusProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Toll-like receptor agonists influence the magnitude and quality of memory T cell responses after prime-boost immunization in nonhuman primatesThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2006
- Cytosolic recognition of flagellin by mouse macrophages restricts Legionella pneumophila infectionThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2006
- Pathogen Recognition and Innate ImmunityCell, 2006
- Recognition of Cytosolic DNA Activates an IRF3-Dependent Innate Immune ResponseImmunity, 2006
- A Toll-like receptor–independent antiviral response induced by double-stranded B-form DNANature Immunology, 2005
- The Role of Toll-like Receptors in the Pathogenesis and Treatment of Dermatological DiseaseJournal of Investigative Dermatology, 2005
- The RNA helicase RIG-I has an essential function in double-stranded RNA-induced innate antiviral responsesNature Immunology, 2004