2023
DOI: 10.3390/vaccines11101599
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Advances in mRNA-Based Cancer Vaccines

Ling Ni

Abstract: Cancer is a leading cause of death worldwide, accounting for millions of deaths every year. Immunotherapy is a groundbreaking approach for treating cancer through harnessing the power of the immune system to target and eliminate cancer cells. Cancer vaccines, one immunotherapy approach, have shown promise in preclinical settings, but researchers have struggled to reproduce these results in clinical settings. However, with the maturity of mRNA technology and its success in tackling the recent coronavirus diseas… Show more

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“…Following the administration and cellular uptake by APCs, mRNA goes to the cytoplasm and undergoes antigen priming and MHC-antigen presentation cascades, leading to APC-mediated antigen presentation via MHC-I and MHC-II and CD8+ and CD4+ T cell activation. Apart from that, CD4+ T cells themselves can induce a humoral immune response through coactivating antigen-specific B cells, and these B cells can serve as APCs to conversely activate CD4+ T cells upon the presentation of antigens to the B cells via MHC class II [385][386][387][388].…”
Section: Mrna-based Vaccinesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Following the administration and cellular uptake by APCs, mRNA goes to the cytoplasm and undergoes antigen priming and MHC-antigen presentation cascades, leading to APC-mediated antigen presentation via MHC-I and MHC-II and CD8+ and CD4+ T cell activation. Apart from that, CD4+ T cells themselves can induce a humoral immune response through coactivating antigen-specific B cells, and these B cells can serve as APCs to conversely activate CD4+ T cells upon the presentation of antigens to the B cells via MHC class II [385][386][387][388].…”
Section: Mrna-based Vaccinesmentioning
confidence: 99%