-
Categories
-
Pharmaceutical Intermediates
-
Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients
-
Food Additives
- Industrial Coatings
- Agrochemicals
- Dyes and Pigments
- Surfactant
- Flavors and Fragrances
- Chemical Reagents
- Catalyst and Auxiliary
- Natural Products
- Inorganic Chemistry
-
Organic Chemistry
-
Biochemical Engineering
- Analytical Chemistry
-
Cosmetic Ingredient
- Water Treatment Chemical
-
Pharmaceutical Intermediates
Promotion
ECHEMI Mall
Wholesale
Weekly Price
Exhibition
News
-
Trade Service
The classical immune system can be divided into two categories
A team of researchers fan Xiaoyong of Shanghai Public Health Clinical Center affiliated to Fudan University published a review entitled Trained immunity: A Yin‐Yang balance in MedComm issued by Wiley, which systematically summarized the discovery process, research model, induction process and regulatory mechanism of training immunity, and proposed for the first time that the impact of training immunity on human health is in line with the ancient Chinese philosophical idea "Yin and Yang Theory"
The concept of trained immunity can be codified as follows: innate immune cells, after being subjected to exogenous or endogenous stimulation, can induce long-acting functional reprogramming, and after the cells return to rest, they still have the ability to respond to secondary homologous or even heterologous infections [2].
Figure 1.
In myeloid cells, there are restriction nuclease recognition sites in the coding sites of inflammatory factor-related genes to maintain the homeostasis of inflammatory factor secretion, and when episcopal regulation such as nucleosome histone acetylation occurs, these inflammation-related genes are rapidly activated, releasing a large number of inflammatory factors
Figure 2.
From an evolutionary perspective, training immunity is a protective mechanism
Figure 3.
The Yin‐Yang balance of trained immunity.
In summary, the proposal of training immunity further breaks down the barrier between innate immunity and adaptive immunity, and its "yin and yang" bifacial nature suggests that we can improve vaccine protection or treat autoimmune diseases
by optimizing training immunity.
Therefore, at the end of the article, the author further discusses the novel immunotherapy strategy based on training immunity, its future research directions and its application prospects
.
References
[1].
Hu Z, Lu S-H, Lowrie-DB, Fan X-Y.
Trained immunity: A Yin-Yang balance.
MedComm.
2022; 3:e121.
https://doi.
org/10.
1002/mco2.
121
[2].
Netea MG, Dominguez-Andres J, Barreiro LB, et al.
Defining trained immunity and its role in health and disease.
Nat Rev Immunol.
2020; 20(6): 375-88.
About the Author of the Newsletter
Fan Xiaoyong, Ph.
D.
, Researcher, Research Team Leader, Doctoral Supervisor, Chief of National Major Special Projects, Vice President and Director of Biobank of Translational Medicine Research Institute of Shanghai Public Health Clinical Center Affiliated to Shanghai Public Health, Executive Deputy Director of Tuberculosis Research Center of Shanghai Institute of Emerging and Reproducible Infectious Diseases, PI of Tuberculosis Infection Immunology and Translational Medicine Research Group; Vice Chairman of the Basic Research Committee of the Tuberculosis Branch of the Chinese Medical Association, Special Editor of Frontiers in Microbiology and Frontiers in Tropical Diseases, Outstanding Academic Leader of Shanghai (2019
).
He has been engaged in scientific research and teaching of tuberculosis and other infectious diseases for a long time, and has applied for more than 10 invention patents and authorized 5 patents, including 1 international PCT patent, of which the new vaccine for tuberculosis of the recombinant Sendai virus vector has been transformed; Published more than fifty PAPERS in SCI as a newsletter or first author, including Mol.
Ther.
、PNAS、J.
Infect.
Dis.
、Lancet Infect.
Dis.
and other internationally renowned journals
.
Journal Introduction
MedComm is a global leader in research and education – Wiley's all-English biomedical journal (https://onlinelibrary.
wiley.
com/journal/26882663) published by PubMed Central (PMC), Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI), Scopus, Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) and other international search databases are included
.
The editor-in-chief is Professor James Henderson Naismith of the University of Oxford (Academician of the Royal Academy of Sciences and Royal Edinburgh Academy of Sciences), Professor Günter P.
Wagner of Yale University (Academician of the National Academy of Sciences, Academician of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Academician of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences), and Professor Wei Yuquan of the State Key Laboratory of Biological Therapy at West China Hospital of Sichuan University (Academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences).
The associate editors and editorial board are composed
of well-known scientists from more than 10 countries around the world.
Academician Wei Yuquan, editor-in-chief, successfully founded Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy (2021 Impact Factor 38.
104)
in 2016.
MedComm is a peer-reviewed online published open access (OA) journal that publishes timely work on basic and clinical research in the biomedical field, and strives to become a high-quality SCI academic journal
with international influence in the biomedical field.
The types of papers published in this journal include Review, Perspective, Research Article, Letter to Editors, Research Highlights, etc.
, and adopt a "fast track" mode for important original achievements, helping authors publish articles at the fastest speed and receive them as soon as one week.
And between 2020 and 2022, the publication fee
of the paper will be waived.
In addition, the format of the article is not limited at the time of submission, and it is revised
according to the requirements of the journal when it is officially accepted for publication.
MedComm sincerely welcomes researchers, doctors and graduate students in the field of biomedicine to actively submit articles to the journal!
Read the MedComm topic issue for free
Cell Death:
https://onlinelibrary.
wiley.
com/doi/toc/10.
1002/(ISSN)2688-2663.
cell-death
Metabolism and Diseases:
https://onlinelibrary.
wiley.
com/doi/toc/10.
1002/(ISSN)2688-2663.
metabolism-diseases
Related Reading
- MedComm | Cell Death is a special issue for you to read for free
- MedComm | It was revealed that the novel "brake" molecule NKG2A has disease specificity for the regulation of depleted CD8+ T cells
- MedComm | Cell Death is a special issue for you to read for free
- MedComm | The discovery of the antifungal drug sertaconazole based on "new use of old drugs" is expected to be used as a potential treatment for non-small cell lung cancer
- MedComm | The study by the Liu Ming/Lei Peng team of Sichuan University revealed that hemoglobin can be used as a prognostic marker for cerebral hemorrhage
Write | Sichuan International Medical Exchange Promotion Association
Adaptation | Tina
We believe that the impact factor is not the only measure of a journal's success, and we are improving the way
we measure and enhance the impact of Wiley journals and the authors' research.
In the future, we will adopt a wider range of journal-based and article-based evaluation metrics to provide a richer form of presentation of journal performance
.
by facilitating discovery, empowering education, and shaping talent.
For more than 200 years, Wiley has driven the development of a
global knowledge ecosystem.
Today, our high-impact content, platforms, and services help researchers, learners, institutions, and businesses achieve their goals
in a rapidly changing world.
Wiley, headquartered in Hoboken, New Jersey, USA, is listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbols WLY and WLYB
.
Like, watch, share, have a one-click triple!