Research news on Molecular Mimicry

Molecular mimicry is a biological process in which structural, conformational, or sequence similarity between foreign antigens (typically from pathogens) and host molecules leads to cross-recognition by the immune system. This resemblance can cause antibodies or T cell receptors generated against microbial epitopes to bind self-antigens, breaking self-tolerance and potentially initiating autoimmune pathology. Mechanistically, mimicry may involve shared linear peptide motifs, similar three-dimensional epitope surfaces, or conserved post-translational modifications. Molecular mimicry is a key concept in immunopathogenesis research, where it is investigated as a mechanism linking infection or vaccination to autoimmune diseases through epitope cross-reactivity and bystander immune activation.

How bacteria learned to target numerous cell types

Viruses attack nearly every living organism on Earth. To do so, they rely on highly specialized proteins that recognize and bind to receptors on the surface of target cells, a molecular arms race that drives constant evolution. ...