Terminology Service for NFDI4Health

Immunoadjuvant

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Adjuvants are mostly pharmacological agents of drug or biological origin used to modify the antigenicity of immunization components, i.e., to stimulate, potentiate, or depress the immune response or to inhibit or enhance specific subclasses of immunocytes. Adjuvants augment, stimulate, activate, potentiate, or modulate the immune response at either the cellular or humoral level. Classical agents (Freund's adjuvant, BCG, Corynebacterium parvum) contain bacterial antigens. Some adjuvants are endogenous (e.g., histamine, interferon, transfer factor, tuftsin, interleukin-1). Their mode of action is either non-specific, resulting in increased immune responsiveness to a variety of antigens, or antigen-specific, affecting a restricted type of immune response to a narrow group of antigens. Since adjuvants enhance the body's immune response, they can be considered a type of immune modulator. [ ]

Term info

Label

Immunoadjuvant

Synonyms
  • Adjuvants, Immunologic
  • Immunoadjuvant
  • Immunologic Adjuvant
  • Immunologic Adjuvants
  • immune adjuvant
  • immunological adjuvant
ALT DEFINITION

A drug that stimulates the immune system to respond to disease.

CHEBI ID

CHEBI:50847

Legacy Concept Name

Immunoadjuvant

Preferred Name

Immunoadjuvant

Semantic Type

Chemical Viewed Functionally

UMLS CUI

C0001551

code

C210

Term relations