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  • Article
  • Open Access
2 Citations
3,059 Views
18 Pages

Anti-Idiotypic Antibody as a Booster Vaccine Against Respiratory Syncytial Virus

  • Shreya Mukhopadhyay,
  • Ioannis Manolaridis,
  • Christopher Warren,
  • Aimin Tang,
  • Gregory O’Donnell,
  • Bin Luo,
  • Ryan P. Staupe,
  • Kalpit A. Vora and
  • Zhifeng Chen

2 January 2025

Background/Objectives: The respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a major cause of lower respiratory tract infections in children and adults. With nearly everyone infected by the age of five, there is an opportunity to develop booster vaccines that enh...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
3,426 Views
21 Pages

Individual Epitope-Specific CD8+ T Cell Immune Responses Are Shaped Differently during Chronic Viral Infection

  • Sebastian Klein,
  • Jasmin Mischke,
  • Finn Beruldsen,
  • Immo Prinz,
  • Dinler A. Antunes,
  • Markus Cornberg and
  • Anke R. M. Kraft

A hallmark in chronic viral infections are exhausted antigen-specific CD8+ T cell responses and the inability of the immune system to eliminate the virus. Currently, there is limited information on the variability of epitope-specific T cell exhaustio...

  • Review
  • Open Access
8 Citations
5,921 Views
24 Pages

Epitope Spreading in Immune-Mediated Glomerulonephritis: The Expanding Target

  • Camillo Tancredi Strizzi,
  • Martina Ambrogio,
  • Francesca Zanoni,
  • Bibiana Bonerba,
  • Maria Elena Bracaccia,
  • Giuseppe Grandaliano and
  • Francesco Pesce

16 October 2024

Epitope spreading is a critical mechanism driving the progression of autoimmune glomerulonephritis. This phenomenon, where immune responses broaden from a single epitope to encompass additional targets, contributes to the complexity and severity of d...

  • Article
  • Open Access
6 Citations
1,765 Views
14 Pages

Ad5-nCoV Vaccination Could Induce HLA-E Restricted CD8+ T Cell Responses Specific for Epitopes on Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Spike Protein

  • Yuling Wang,
  • Lu Yang,
  • Kang Tang,
  • Yusi Zhang,
  • Chunmei Zhang,
  • Yun Zhang,
  • Boquan Jin,
  • Yuan Zhang,
  • Ran Zhuang and
  • Ying Ma

28 December 2023

We evaluated cellular immune responses induced by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) vaccines in an immunized population based on HLA-E-restricted CD8+ T cell epitope identification. HLA-E-restricted SARS-CoV-2 CD8+ T cell n...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
1,644 Views
16 Pages

Features of Highly Homologous T-Cell Receptor Repertoire in the Immune Response to Mutations in Immunogenic Epitopes

  • Ksenia Zornikova,
  • Dmitry Dianov,
  • Natalia Ivanova,
  • Vassa Davydova,
  • Tatiana Nenasheva,
  • Ekaterina Fefelova and
  • Apollinariya Bogolyubova

23 November 2024

CD8+ T-cell immunity, mediated through interactions between human leukocyte antigen (HLA) and the T-cell receptor (TCR), plays a pivotal role in conferring immune memory and protection against viral infections. The emergence of SARS-CoV-2 variants pr...

  • Article
  • Open Access
13 Citations
4,242 Views
24 Pages

23 September 2021

Visceral leishmaniasis is a neglected tropical disease affecting 12 million people annually. Even in the second decade of the 21st century, it has remained without an effective vaccine for human use. In the current study, we designed three multiepito...

  • Article
  • Open Access
5 Citations
2,871 Views
12 Pages

Boosting PRRSV-Specific Cellular Immunity: The Immunological Profiling of an Fc-Fused Multi-CTL Epitope Vaccine in Mice

  • Xinnuo Lei,
  • Jinzhao Ban,
  • Zhi Wu,
  • Shinuo Cao,
  • Mo Zhou,
  • Li Zhang,
  • Rui Zhu,
  • Huipeng Lu and
  • Shanyuan Zhu

15 June 2024

The continuously evolving PRRSV has been plaguing pig farms worldwide for over 30 years, with conventional vaccines suffering from insufficient protection and biosecurity risks. To address these challenges, we identified 10 PRRSV-specific CTL epitope...

  • Article
  • Open Access
17 Citations
3,262 Views
16 Pages

Harnessing the Activation of Toll-Like Receptor 2/6 by Self-Assembled Cross-β Fibrils to Design Adjuvanted Nanovaccines

  • Soultan Al-Halifa,
  • Ximena Zottig,
  • Margaryta Babych,
  • Mélanie Côté-Cyr,
  • Steve Bourgault and
  • Denis Archambault

7 October 2020

Protein fibrils characterized with a cross-β-sheet quaternary structure have gained interest as nanomaterials in biomedicine, including in the design of subunit vaccines. Recent studies have shown that by conjugating an antigenic determinant to...

  • Article
  • Open Access
11 Citations
4,472 Views
14 Pages

Immunogenicity and Protective Capacity of a Virus-like Particle Vaccine against Chlamydia trachomatis Type 3 Secretion System Tip Protein, CT584

  • Everett Webster,
  • Kyra W. Seiger,
  • Susan B. Core,
  • Amanda L. Collar,
  • Hannah Knapp-Broas,
  • June Graham,
  • Muskan Shrestha,
  • Sarah Afzaal,
  • William M. Geisler and
  • Rebeccah S. Lijek
  • + 3 authors

12 January 2022

An effective vaccine against Chlamydia trachomatis is urgently needed as infection rates continue to rise and C. trachomatis causes reproductive morbidity. An obligate intracellular pathogen, C. trachomatis employs a type 3 secretion system (T3SS) fo...

  • Review
  • Open Access
1 Citations
5,836 Views
17 Pages

12 September 2025

The landscape of cancer immunotherapy must shift from personalized neoantigen vaccines toward universal platforms that leverage innate immune activation. This review examines a novel mRNA vaccine strategy that encodes non-tumor-specific antigens, car...

  • Article
  • Open Access
9 Citations
3,216 Views
15 Pages

21 December 2020

Failing BK polyomavirus (BKPyV)-specific immune control is underlying onset and duration of BKPyV-replication and disease. We focused on BKPyV-specific CD8 T-cells as key effectors and characterized immunodominant 9mer epitopes in the viral large tum...

  • Article
  • Open Access
4 Citations
3,965 Views
27 Pages

A Mutated Prostatic Acid Phosphatase (PAP) Peptide-Based Vaccine Induces PAP-Specific CD8+ T Cells with Ex Vivo Cytotoxic Capacities in HHDII/DR1 Transgenic Mice

  • Pauline Le Vu,
  • Jayakumar Vadakekolathu,
  • Sarra Idri,
  • Holly Nicholls,
  • Manon Cavaignac,
  • Stephen Reeder,
  • Masood A. Khan,
  • Dennis Christensen,
  • Alan Graham Pockley and
  • Stéphanie E. McArdle

13 April 2022

Background: Current treatments for castrate (hormone)-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) remain limited and are not curative, with a median survival from diagnosis of 23 months. The PAP-specific Sipuleucel-T vaccine, which was approved by the FDA in 20...

  • Article
  • Open Access
20 Citations
5,374 Views
19 Pages

Specific Antibodies Induced by Immunization with Hepatitis B Virus-Like Particles Carrying Hepatitis C Virus Envelope Glycoprotein 2 Epitopes Show Differential Neutralization Efficiency

  • Anna Czarnota,
  • Anna Offersgaard,
  • Anne Finne Pihl,
  • Jannick Prentoe,
  • Jens Bukh,
  • Judith Margarete Gottwein,
  • Krystyna Bieńkowska-Szewczyk and
  • Katarzyna Grzyb

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection with associated chronic liver diseases is a major health problem worldwide. Here, we designed hepatitis B virus (HBV) small surface antigen (sHBsAg) virus-like particles (VLPs) presenting different epitopes derived f...

  • Article
  • Open Access
3 Citations
2,978 Views
18 Pages

Immunogenicity of Trypanosoma cruzi Multi-Epitope Recombinant Protein as an Antigen Candidate for Chagas Disease Vaccine in Humans

  • Christian F. Teh-Poot,
  • Andrea Alfaro-Chacón,
  • Landy M. Pech-Pisté,
  • Miguel E. Rosado-Vallado,
  • Oluwatoyin Ajibola Asojo,
  • Liliana E. Villanueva-Lizama,
  • Eric Dumonteil and
  • Julio Vladimir Cruz-Chan

Chagas disease, caused by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi (T. cruzi), is the most significant neglected tropical disease affecting individuals in the Americas. Currently, available drugs, such as nifurtimox and benznidazole (BZN), are both toxic and...

  • Article
  • Open Access
27 Citations
8,602 Views
25 Pages

A Synthetic Virus-Like Particle Streptococcal Vaccine Candidate Using B-Cell Epitopes from the Proline-Rich Region of Pneumococcal Surface Protein A

  • Marco Tamborrini,
  • Nina Geib,
  • Aniebrys Marrero-Nodarse,
  • Maja Jud,
  • Julia Hauser,
  • Celestine Aho,
  • Araceli Lamelas,
  • Armando Zuniga,
  • Gerd Pluschke and
  • John A. Robinson
  • + 1 author

16 October 2015

Alternatives to the well-established capsular polysaccharide-based vaccines against Streptococcus pneumoniae that circumvent limitations arising from limited serotype coverage and the emergence of resistance due to capsule switching (serotype replace...

  • Article
  • Open Access
4 Citations
3,022 Views
19 Pages

Identification of Closed Linear Epitopes in S1-RBD and S2-HR1/2 of SARS-CoV-2 Spike Protein Able to Induce Neutralizing Abs

  • Yoshihiro Watanabe,
  • Natsuko Hosokawa,
  • Misaki Yoshida,
  • Tomoyuki Miura and
  • Mitsuhiro Kawano

28 January 2023

SARS-CoV-2 has evolved as several variants. Immunization to boost the Ab response to Spike antigens is effective, but similar vaccines could not enhance Ab efficacy enough. Effective Ab responses against the human ACE2 (hACE2)-mediated infection of t...

  • Review
  • Open Access
17 Citations
7,022 Views
41 Pages

7 August 2021

Pertussis (‘whooping cough’) is a severe respiratory tract infection that primarily affects young children and unimmunised infants. Despite widespread vaccine coverage, it remains one of the least well-controlled vaccine-preventable diseases, with a...

  • Communication
  • Open Access
9 Citations
6,181 Views
14 Pages

Although the existing paradigm states that cytomegalovirus (CMV) reactivation is under the control of the cellular immune response, the role of humoral and innate counterparts are underestimated. The study analyzed the host–virus interaction i.e., CM...

  • Article
  • Open Access
22 Citations
5,234 Views
21 Pages

Revisiting CD8 T-cell ‘Memory Inflation’: New Insights with Implications for Cytomegaloviruses as Vaccine Vectors

  • Rafaela Holtappels,
  • Kirsten Freitag,
  • Angelique Renzaho,
  • Sara Becker,
  • Niels A.W. Lemmermann and
  • Matthias J. Reddehase

Murine models of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection have revealed an exceptional kinetics of the immune response. After resolution of productive infection, transient contraction of the viral epitope-specific CD8 T-cell pool was found to be followed by a...

  • Review
  • Open Access
24 Citations
6,778 Views
15 Pages

Prophylactic Hepatitis E Vaccines: Antigenic Analysis and Serological Evaluation

  • Yike Li,
  • Xiaofen Huang,
  • Zhigang Zhang,
  • Shaowei Li,
  • Jun Zhang,
  • Ningshao Xia and
  • Qinjian Zhao

16 January 2020

Hepatitis E virus (HEV) infection causes sporadic outbreaks of acute hepatitis worldwide. HEV was previously considered to be restricted to resource-limited countries with poor sanitary conditions, but increasing evidence implies that HEV is also a p...

  • Article
  • Open Access
10 Citations
5,087 Views
14 Pages

15 February 2023

It is clear that new approaches are needed to promote broadly protective immunity to viral pathogens, particularly those that are prone to mutation and escape from antibody-mediated immunity. Prototypic pathogens of this type are influenza and SARS-C...

  • Article
  • Open Access
14 Citations
4,346 Views
13 Pages

Dengue virus (DENV) is a major global health problem, with over half of the world’s population at risk of infection. Despite over 60 years of efforts, no licensed vaccine suitable for population-based immunization against DENV is available. Here, we...

  • Article
  • Open Access
5 Citations
3,969 Views
22 Pages

A Novel Orf Virus D1701-VrV-Based Dengue Virus (DENV) Vaccine Candidate Expressing HLA-Specific T Cell Epitopes: A Proof-of-Concept Study

  • Alena Reguzova,
  • Nico Fischer,
  • Melanie Müller,
  • Ferdinand Salomon,
  • Thomas Jaenisch and
  • Ralf Amann

Although dengue virus (DENV) affects almost half of the world’s population there are neither preventive treatments nor any long-lasting and protective vaccines available at this time. The complexity of the protective immune response to DENV is...

  • Communication
  • Open Access
3 Citations
2,495 Views
12 Pages

Immunological memory can be defined as the ability to mount a response of greater magnitude and with faster kinetics upon re-encounter of the same antigen. We have previously reported that a booster dose of a protein antigen given 15 days after the f...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1,855 Views
14 Pages

23 December 2024

Background: Live viral vector-based vaccines are known to elicit strong immune responses, but their use can be limited by anti-vector immunity. Here, we analyzed the immunological responses of a live-attenuated recombinant Pichinde virus (PICV) vecto...

  • Communication
  • Open Access
10 Citations
3,685 Views
9 Pages

Epitope-Specific Response of Human Milk Immunoglobulins in COVID-19 Recovered Women

  • Tatyana V. Bobik,
  • Nikita N. Kostin,
  • George A. Skryabin,
  • Polina N. Tsabai,
  • Maria A. Simonova,
  • Vera D. Knorre,
  • Yuliana A. Mokrushina,
  • Ivan V. Smirnov,
  • Julia A. Kosolapova and
  • Alexander G. Gabibov
  • + 8 authors

The breastfeeding of infants by mothers who are infected with SARS-CoV-2 has become a dramatic healthcare problem. The WHO recommends that infected women should not abandon breastfeeding; however, there is still the risk of contact transmission. Conv...

  • Review
  • Open Access
26 Citations
4,317 Views
15 Pages

Serological, Molecular and Culture-Based Diagnosis of Lentiviral Infections in Small Ruminants

  • Aphrodite I. Kalogianni,
  • Ioannis Stavropoulos,
  • Serafeim C. Chaintoutis,
  • Ioannis Bossis and
  • Athanasios I. Gelasakis

27 August 2021

Small ruminant lentiviruses (SRLVs) infections lead to chronic diseases and remarkable economic losses undermining health and welfare of animals and the sustainability of farms. Early and definite diagnosis of SRLVs infections is the cornerstone for...

  • Article
  • Open Access
5 Citations
2,833 Views
16 Pages

Memory CD8 T Cells Protect against Cytomegalovirus Disease by Formation of Nodular Inflammatory Foci Preventing Intra-Tissue Virus Spread

  • Rafaela Holtappels,
  • Jürgen Podlech,
  • Kirsten Freitag,
  • Niels A. Lemmermann and
  • Matthias J. Reddehase

25 May 2022

Cytomegaloviruses (CMVs) are controlled by innate and adaptive immune responses in an immunocompetent host while causing multiple organ diseases in an immunocompromised host. A risk group of high clinical relevance comprises transiently immunocomprom...

  • Article
  • Open Access
5 Citations
4,521 Views
19 Pages

Transgenic Mice Expressing Functional TCRs Specific to Cardiac Myhc-α 334–352 on Both CD4 and CD8 T Cells Are Resistant to the Development of Myocarditis on C57BL/6 Genetic Background

  • Meghna Sur,
  • Mahima T. Rasquinha,
  • Rajkumar Arumugam,
  • Chandirasegaran Massilamany,
  • Arunkumar Gangaplara,
  • Kiruthiga Mone,
  • Ninaad Lasrado,
  • Bharathi Yalaka,
  • Aakash Doiphode and
  • Jay Reddy
  • + 2 authors

25 September 2023

Myocarditis is a predominant cause of congestive heart failure and sudden death in children and young adolescents that can lead to dilated cardiomyopathy. Lymphocytic myocarditis mediated by T cells can result from the recognition of cardiac antigens...

  • Review
  • Open Access
3 Citations
5,345 Views
30 Pages

7 February 2022

“Bugs as drugs” in medicine encompasses the use of microbes to enhance the efficacy of vaccination, such as the delivery of vaccines by Leishmania—the protozoan etiological agent of leishmaniasis. This novel approach is appraised in...

  • Article
  • Open Access
2 Citations
3,033 Views
18 Pages

Dynamics of IgM and IgG Antibody Response Profile against Linear B-Cell Epitopes from Exoerythrocytic (CelTOS and TRAP) and Erythrocytic (CyRPA) Phases of Plasmodium vivax: Follow-Up Study

  • Cinthia Magalhães Rodolphi,
  • Isabela Ferreira Soares,
  • Ada da Silva Matos,
  • Rodrigo Nunes Rodrigues-da-Silva,
  • Marcelo Urbano Ferreira,
  • Lilian Rose Pratt-Riccio,
  • Paulo Renato Rivas Totino,
  • Kézia Katiani Gorza Scopel and
  • Josué da Costa Lima-Junior

15 August 2024

Malaria is a serious health problem worldwide affecting mainly children and socially vulnerable people. The biological particularities of P. vivax, such as the ability to generate dormant liver stages, the rapid maturation of gametocytes, and the eme...

  • Article
  • Open Access
3 Citations
2,502 Views
14 Pages

27 February 2025

Background/Objectives: Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (PRRSV) is classified into various lineages based on the phylogenetic variation of orf5, which encodes a major surface glycoprotein GP5 containing both neutralizing and non-ne...

  • Article
  • Open Access
2 Citations
1,638 Views
17 Pages

Dynamics of IgM and IgA Antibody Response Profile Against Vibrio cholerae Toxins A, B, and P

  • Salvatore Giovanni De-Simone,
  • Paloma Napoleão-Pêgo,
  • Guilherme Curty Lechuga,
  • Joao Pedro Rangel Silva Carvalho,
  • Sergian Vianna Cardozo,
  • Alexandre Oliveira Saisse,
  • Carlos Medicis Morel,
  • David William Provance and
  • Flavio Rocha da Silva

The first immune response controls many bacterial and viral inflammatory diseases. Oral immunization with cholera toxin (CT) elicits antibodies and can prevent cholerae in endemic environments. While the IgG immune response to the toxin is well-docum...

  • Article
  • Open Access
5 Citations
17,173 Views
10 Pages

Comirnaty-Elicited and Convalescent Sera Recognize Different Spike Epitopes

  • Sascha Hein,
  • Nuka Ivalu Benz,
  • Jonathan Eisert,
  • Marie-Luise Herrlein,
  • Doris Oberle,
  • Michael Dreher,
  • Julia C. Stingl,
  • Christoph Hildt and
  • Eberhard Hildt

1 December 2021

Many of the approved SARS-CoV-2 vaccines are based on a stabilized variant of the spike protein. This raises the question of whether the immune response against the stabilized spike is identical to the immune response that is elicited by the native s...

  • Article
  • Open Access
12 Citations
3,152 Views
16 Pages

Resilience of Spike-Specific Immunity Induced by COVID-19 Vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 Variants

  • Laura Ballesteros-Sanabria,
  • Hector F. Pelaez-Prestel,
  • Alvaro Ras-Carmona and
  • Pedro A. Reche

The outbreak of SARS-CoV-2 leading to the declaration of the COVID-19 global pandemic has led to the urgent development and deployment of several COVID-19 vaccines. Many of these new vaccines, including those based on mRNA and adenoviruses, are aimed...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
3,226 Views
12 Pages

Peptide Linked Diacetylene Amphiphiles for Detection of Epitope Specific Antibodies

  • Natalie Tran,
  • Priyanka Shiveshwarkar and
  • Justyn Jaworski

Antibodies produced in response to adaptive immunity provide a receptor with multiple sites for binding to a distinct epitope of an antigen. Determining antibody levels to specific antigens has important clinical applications in assessing immune stat...

  • Article
  • Open Access
4 Citations
2,459 Views
23 Pages

Anti-Idiotypic Nanobodies Mimicking an Epitope of the Needle Protein of the Chlamydial Type III Secretion System for Targeted Immune Stimulation

  • Ekaterina A. Koroleva,
  • Oksana S. Goryainova,
  • Tatiana I. Ivanova,
  • Marina V. Rutovskaya,
  • Naylia A. Zigangirova and
  • Sergei V. Tillib

7 February 2024

The development of new approaches and drugs for effective control of the chronic and complicated forms of urogenital chlamydia caused by Chlamydia trachomatis, which is suspected to be one of the main causes of infertility in both women and men, is a...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
1,626 Views
16 Pages

Humanized Major Histocompatibility Complex Transgenic Mouse Model Can Play a Potent Role in SARS-CoV-2 Human Leukocyte Antigen-Restricted T Cell Epitope Screening

  • Jiejie Zhang,
  • Feimin Fang,
  • Yue Zhang,
  • Xuelian Han,
  • Yuan Wang,
  • Qi Yin,
  • Keyu Sun,
  • Haisheng Zhou,
  • Hanxiong Qin and
  • Guangyu Zhao
  • + 9 authors

15 April 2025

Background: COVID-19, caused by SARS-CoV-2, poses a significant threat to human health. Vaccines designed for T-cell epitopes play an important role in eliminating the virus. However, T cell epitope screening often requires the use of a large number...

  • Review
  • Open Access
7 Citations
6,650 Views
22 Pages

Mechanisms of HIV Protein Degradation into Epitopes: Implications for Vaccine Design

  • Marijana Rucevic,
  • Julie Boucau,
  • Jens Dinter,
  • Georgio Kourjian and
  • Sylvie Le Gall

21 August 2014

The degradation of HIV-derived proteins into epitopes displayed by MHC-I or MHC-II are the first events leading to the priming of HIV-specific immune responses and to the recognition of infected cells. Despite a wealth of information about peptidases...

  • Review
  • Open Access
19 Citations
5,397 Views
30 Pages

27 February 2025

The increasing resistance of bacteria to antibiotics has underscored the need for new drugs or vaccines to prevent bacterial infections. Reducing multidrug resistance is a key objective of the WHO’s One Health initiative. Epitopes, the key part...

  • Article
  • Open Access
4 Citations
3,072 Views
17 Pages

Mapping IgA Epitope and Cross-Reactivity between Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome-Associated Coronavirus 2 and DENV

  • Salvatore G. De-Simone,
  • Paloma Napoleão-Pêgo,
  • Guilherme C. Lechuga,
  • João P. R. S. Carvalho,
  • Maria E. Monteiro,
  • Carlos M. Morel and
  • David W. Provance

24 November 2023

Background: The newly introduced COVID-19 vaccines have reduced disease severity and hospitalizations. However, they do not significantly prevent infection or transmission. In the same context, measuring IgM and IgG antibody levels is important, but...

  • Article
  • Open Access
15 Citations
4,076 Views
19 Pages

19 November 2020

The recent progress in immunoinformatics provided the basis for an accelerated development of target-specific peptide vaccines as an alternative to the traditional vaccine concept. However, there is still limited information on whether the in silico...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1,409 Views
22 Pages

Long-Term Protection Against Symptomatic Omicron Infections Requires Balanced Immunity Against Spike Epitopes After COVID-19 Vaccination

  • Heiko Pfister,
  • Carsten Uhlig,
  • Zsuzsanna Mayer,
  • Eleni Polatoglou,
  • Hannah Randeu,
  • Silke Burglechner-Praun,
  • Tabea Berchtold,
  • Susanne Sernetz,
  • Felicitas Heitzer and
  • Stefan Holdenrieder
  • + 3 authors

15 August 2025

Background: Systematic studies providing differentiated insight into the contribution of immunity directed against conserved and non-conserved epitopes of SARS-CoV-2 Spike on long-term protection are rare and insufficiently guide future pan-variant v...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
2,117 Views
11 Pages

21 June 2024

B cell epitopes must be visible for recognition by cognate B cells and/or antibodies. Here, we studied that premise for known linear B cell epitopes that were collected from the Immune Epitope Database as being recognized by humans during microbial i...

  • Article
  • Open Access
3 Citations
2,380 Views
17 Pages

Intact Transition Epitope Mapping—Serological Inspection by Epitope EXtraction (ITEM—SIX)

  • Agatino Zammataro,
  • Cornelia Koy,
  • Manuela Ruß,
  • Claudia Röwer and
  • Michael O. Glocker

30 March 2023

Precision medicine requests accurate serological inspections to precisely stratify patients for targeted treatment. Intact transition epitope mapping analysis proved surrogate seroconversion of a model organism’s serum when spiked with a monocl...

  • Article
  • Open Access
10 Citations
2,722 Views
15 Pages

Healthy Donors Harbor Memory T Cell Responses to RAS Neo-Antigens

  • Morten Orebo Holmström and
  • Mads Hald Andersen

19 October 2020

The RAS mutations are the most frequently occurring somatic mutations in humans, and several studies have established that T cells from patients with RAS-mutant cancer recognize and kill RAS-mutant cells. Enhancing the T cell response via therapeutic...

  • Article
  • Open Access
909 Views
26 Pages

Optimized Multi-Epitope Norovirus Vaccines Induce Robust Humoral and Cellular Responses in Mice

  • Ziyan Xing,
  • Luyao Ji,
  • Peifang Cao,
  • Ercui Feng,
  • Qing Xu,
  • Xun Chen,
  • Wenlong Dai and
  • Nan Jiang

31 December 2025

Background: Norovirus GII.4 is a major global health threat, yet no licensed vaccines exist due to the virus’s rapid evolution and high mutation rates. Objective: To rationally design and experimentally validate multi-epitope vaccine candidates...

  • Article
  • Open Access
1 Citations
3,203 Views
14 Pages

A Polypeptide of Tumor-Associated Antigen L6 with Intrinsic Adjuvant Activity Enhances Antitumor Immunity

  • Yuh-Pyng Sher,
  • Kit Man Chai,
  • Wen-Ching Chen,
  • Kuan-Yin Shen,
  • I-Hua Chen,
  • Ming-Hui Lee,
  • Fang-Feng Chiu and
  • Shih-Jen Liu

21 October 2020

Peptide vaccines are safe, and aim to elicit and expand tumor-specific immunity so as to eradicate tumors. However, achieving strong and long-lasting anti-tumor immunity with peptide vaccines for the antigen-specific treatment of cancer is challengin...

  • Article
  • Open Access
13 Citations
4,771 Views
22 Pages

Chimeric RHDV Virus-Like Particles Displaying Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus Epitopes Elicit Neutralizing Antibodies and Confer Partial Protection in Pigs

  • Giselle Rangel,
  • Juan Bárcena,
  • Noelia Moreno,
  • Carlos P. Mata,
  • José R. Castón,
  • Alí Alejo and
  • Esther Blanco

Currently there is a clear trend towards the establishment of virus-like particles (VLPs) as a powerful tool for vaccine development. VLPs are tunable nanoparticles that can be engineered to be used as platforms for multimeric display of foreign anti...

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