4.5 Article

Prophylactic and therapeutic insights into trained immunity: A renewed concept of innate immune memory

Journal

HUMAN VACCINES & IMMUNOTHERAPEUTICS
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2022.2040238

Keywords

Trained immunity; metabolic pathway; epigenetics; Immunological memory; immune cells; non-Immune cells; therapeutics; vaccines

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Trained immunity is a concept of innate immune memory that allows the immune system to remember and train cells, providing non-specific defense and a quicker and stronger immune response. Trained immunity-based vaccines can serve as potent immune stimuli and confer protection.
Trained immunity is a renewed concept of innate immune memory that facilitates the innate immune system to have the capacity to remember and train cells via metabolic and transcriptional events to enable them to provide nonspecific defense against the subsequent encounters with a range of pathogens and acquire a quicker and more robust immune response, but different from the adaptive immune memory. Reversing the epigenetic changes or targeting the immunological pathways may be considered potential therapeutic approaches to counteract the hyper-responsive or hypo-responsive state of trained immunity. The efficient regulation of immune homeostasis and promotion or inhibition of immune responses is required for a balanced response. Trained immunity-based vaccines can serve as potent immune stimuli and help in the clearance of pathogens in the body through multiple or heterologous effects and confer protection against nonspecific and specific pathogens. This review highlights various features of trained immunity and its applications in developing novel therapeutics and vaccines, along with certain detrimental effects, challenges as well as future perspectives.

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