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immunogenne

Immunogenne is a proposed term in immunology used to describe a gene or genetic element associated with the generation or regulation of immune responses to antigens. The term is not part of standard nomenclature and its precise meaning varies between sources, sometimes functioning as a placeholder for either a molecule that directly constitutes an immunogenic determinant or a locus that modulates immunogenicity.

In some usages, immunogenne denotes a gene encoding an immunogenic protein or peptide that can be processed

Functional roles attributed to immunogenne include shaping which epitopes are emphasized during an immune response and

Applications of the concept appear in discussions of vaccine design, neoantigen discovery, and immunotherapy safety, where

See also: immunogen, epitope, antigen, immunogenicity, MHC, vaccine, immunogenomics.

and
presented
by
MHC
molecules
and
recognized
by
T
or
B
cells.
In
other
usages,
it
refers
to
host
genetic
loci
that
influence
how
strongly
an
antigen
is
perceived
by
the
immune
system,
through
effects
on
antigen
processing,
presentation,
co-stimulation,
or
cytokine
signaling.
The
concept
emphasizes
the
genetic
basis
of
immunogenicity
rather
than
a
single
biochemical
entity.
determining
individual
variation
in
vaccine
responsiveness
and
susceptibility
to
immune-mediated
diseases.
Because
the
term
is
not
standardized,
researchers
may
classify
immunogenne-related
effects
as
structural,
processing-related,
or
regulatory.
understanding
genetic
factors
that
affect
immunogenicity
can
inform
antigen
selection
and
risk
assessment.
However,
the
lack
of
a
formal
definition
means
that
immunogenne
remains
a
theoretical
construct
rather
than
a
universally
recognized
category.