T cell vaccination
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
T cell vaccination is immunization with inactivated autoreactive T cells. The concept of T cell vaccination is, at least partially, analogous to classical vaccination against infectious disease. However, the agents to be eliminated or neutralized are not foreign microbial agents but a pathogenic autoreactive T cell population. Research on T cell vaccination so far has focussed mostly on multiple sclerosis and to a lesser extent on rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's disease and AIDS.
[edit] References
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- Cohen IR (2001). "T-cell vaccination for autoimmune disease: a panorama". Vaccine 20 (5-6): 706–10. doi: . PMID 11738733.