Most vaccines work by teaching the immune system to recognize harmful viruses or bacteria before a person gets infected and becomes unwell. A few cancer vaccines do this, too. For example, a vaccine is given to young people as protection against human papillomaviruses that can cause cervical cancer. But scientists are also developing cancer vaccines that could be used as treatments, after cancer has been found. These vaccines work by teaching the body's immune system to distinguish between healthy cells and abnormal cancer cells. To do this, researchers need to identify proteins that are made by cancer cells but not by healthy cells. These proteins can be used like a barcode. The vaccine teaches the body's immune cells to 'read' the barcode, as a way of identifying the cancer. This video explains how these vaccines are made, and the pros and cons of various types of cancer vaccine. doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-024-00842-x This article is part of Nature Outline: Cancer vaccines, a supplement produced with the financial support from Moderna. Nature maintains full independence in all editorial decisions related to the content. About this content.
Cancer-vaccine trials give reasons for optimism Outline27 MAR 24 How does a cancer vaccine work? Outline27 MAR 24 Cutting-edge CAR-T cancer therapy is now made in India — at one-tenth the cost News21 MAR 24
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We search the candidate for the subproject "P2: targeting cardiac macrophages" as part of the DFG-funded Research Training Group "GRK 2989: Targeti... Dortmund, Nordrhein-Westfalen (DE) Leibniz-Institut für Analytische Wissenschaften – ISAS – e.V.
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