×
Home
Current Archive Submission Guidelines
News Contact
Review paper

Selective Immunotherapy by Engineered Chimeric Molecules

By
Nikolina Mihaylova Orcid logo ,
Nikolina Mihaylova
Andrey Tchorbanov Orcid logo
Andrey Tchorbanov

Abstract

In many physiological processes, peptides play a critical role as neurotrans mitters, hormones, antibiotics, etc. They have research importance in fields such as immunology, pharmacology, neuroscience and cell biology. There are many approaches for immunotherapies: some of them use the peptides as important components of chimeric molecules for immunosuppression, the others - as peptide-based vaccines for immunostimulation. These immunotherapeutic strategies offer the advantages of being safe, easy to produce, devoid of oncogenic potential, and can be chemically or genetically engineered into defined conformational active form. 
The peptides contain very important functional part called epitope, which is recognized by the immune system, specifically by antibodies, B or T cell receptors. Epitopes play a prominent role in the peptide-based vaccines and disease diagnosis. 
Protein-engineered or genetically engineered peptides conjugated to antibody-carrier could be used as a targeting device delivering the epitopes to the cells of interest.  

References

1.
Mackay M, Stanevsky A, Wang T, Aranow C, Li M, Koenig S, et al. Selective dys regulation of the Fc gammaIIB receptor on memory B cells in SLE. J Exp Med. 2006;203:2157–64.

Citation

Article metrics

Google scholar: See link

The statements, opinions and data contained in the journal are solely those of the individual authors and contributors and not of the publisher and the editor(s). We stay neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.