| Home > Publications Database > Defining trained immunity and its role in health and disease |
| Journal Article (Review Article) | DZNE-2020-01051 |
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2020
Nature Publ. Group
London
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Please use a persistent id in citations: doi:10.1038/s41577-020-0285-6
Abstract: Immune memory is a defining feature of the acquired immune system, but activation of the innate immune system can also result in enhanced responsiveness to subsequent triggers. This process has been termed ‘trained immunity’, a de facto innate immune memory. Research in the past decade has pointed to the broad benefits of trained immunity for host defence but has also suggested potentially detrimental outcomes in immune-mediated and chronic inflammatory diseases. Here we define ‘trained immunity’ as a biological process and discuss the innate stimuli and the epigenetic and metabolic reprogramming events that shape the induction of trained immunity.
Keyword(s): Adaptive Immunity: genetics (MeSH) ; Adaptive Immunity: immunology (MeSH) ; Animals (MeSH) ; Epigenesis, Genetic: immunology (MeSH) ; Humans (MeSH) ; Immune System: immunology (MeSH) ; Immune System: metabolism (MeSH) ; Immune System Diseases: genetics (MeSH) ; Immune System Diseases: immunology (MeSH) ; Immune Tolerance: genetics (MeSH) ; Immune Tolerance: immunology (MeSH) ; Immunity, Innate: genetics (MeSH) ; Immunity, Innate: immunology (MeSH) ; Immunologic Memory: genetics (MeSH) ; Immunologic Memory: immunology (MeSH) ; Inflammation: genetics (MeSH) ; Inflammation: immunology (MeSH)
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