On antigen‐specific signals, immune class regulation and energetics: Report III from the workshops on foundational concepts of immune regulation

Author:

Anderson Colin C.12ORCID,Bonney Elizabeth A.3,Mueller Thomas F.4,Corthay Alexandre56,Havele Calliopi7,Singh Nevil J.8,Øynebråten Inger56,Bretscher Peter A.7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

2. Alberta Diabetes and Transplant Institutes, University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

3. Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences University of Vermont, Larner College of medicine Burlington Vermont USA

4. Clinic of Nephrology University Hospital Zurich Zurich Switzerland

5. Tumor Immunology Lab, Department of Pathology Oslo University Hospital Oslo Norway

6. Hybrid Technology Hub – Centre of Excellence Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Oslo Oslo Norway

7. Dept of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Immunology University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon Saskatchewan Canada

8. Department of Microbiology and Immunology University of Maryland School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA

Abstract

AbstractThis is a report from a one‐week workshop held in Athens, Greece in July of 2022. The workshop aimed to identify emerging concepts relevant to the fundamentals of immune regulation and areas for future research. Theories of immune regulation emphasize the role of T cell help or co‐stimulation (signal 2). The workshop participants considered how new data on the characteristics of agonist antigens, the role of the antigen receptor signals (signal 1) in driving fate decisions, the effect of energetics on immunity and a better understanding of class‐control in the immune response, may impact theories of immune regulation. These ideas were discussed in the context of tumour immunology, autoimmunity, pregnancy and transplantation. Here we present the discussions as a narrative of different viewpoints to allow the reader to join the conversation. These discussions highlight the evolving understanding of the nature of specific antigen recognition and how both antigen‐specific and non‐specific mechanisms impact immune responses.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Immunology,General Medicine

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