
pmid: 11851329
Synthetic peptides are safe and relatively cheap vaccine components. However, the efficiency of peptide vaccines is limited by peptide interaction with non-professional antigen-presenting cells, which may hamper induction of productive T-cell responses. This paper argues that peptide vaccines should be modified for exclusive uptake by cells with the capacity to prime T-cell responses. Moreover, design of peptide vaccines should take intracellular antigen processing into account and exploit cellular mechanisms of proteolysis, transport and HLA class I assembly of antigenic peptides to enhance efficiency of T-cell priming and stimulation.
Vaccines, Histocompatibility Antigens Class I, Peptides
Vaccines, Histocompatibility Antigens Class I, Peptides
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