Skip to main content

Defining trained immunity and its role in health and disease.

Nature reviews. Immunology

Authors: Mihai G Netea, Jorge Domínguez-Andrés, Luis B Barreiro, Triantafyllos Chavakis, Maziar Divangahi, Elaine Fuchs, Leo A B Joosten, Jos W M van der Meer, Musa M Mhlanga, Willem J M Mulder, Niels P Riksen, Andreas Schlitzer, Joachim L Schultze, Christine Stabell Benn, Joseph C Sun, Ramnik J Xavier, Eicke Latz

Immune memory is a defining feature of the acquired immune system, but activation of the innate immune system can also result in enhanced responsiveness to subsequent triggers. This process has been termed 'trained immunity', a de facto innate immune memory. Research in the past decade has pointed to the broad benefits of trained immunity for host defence but has also suggested potentially detrimental outcomes in immune-mediated and chronic inflammatory diseases. Here we define 'trained immunity' as a biological process and discuss the innate stimuli and the epigenetic and metabolic reprogramming events that shape the induction of trained immunity.

PMID: 32132681

Participating cluster members