Close Search

Products

Enter keywords

Related results

Peptide receptive HLA class I molecules allowing you to make your own custom peptide-HLA complexes.

HLA-C0802 easYmers®

Catalog no.
1125-01
Group
HLA-C
Alpha chain
HLA-C0802
Beta chain
b2m
Peptide
FADINGKLY
Peptide source
SARS-CoV1 Replicase polyprotein 1ab (1232-1240)
Format
easYmer
Storage
-20°C
Buffer
TRIS/MALEATE pH 8
Shelf life
18 Months
Application
easYmers® are peptide receptive HLA class I molecules which can be used to generate peptide HLA (pHLA) monomers with your choice of peptide. The monomers can easily be tetramerized with fluorophore conjugated streptavidin and used to analyse T cells by flowcytometry. The easYmer reagent can also be used to evaluate specific pHLA I interactions.
Concentration
3000 nM
For Research Use Only (RUO)

Published Research using immunAware reagents and services

01/03/2026

Nature

Individualized mRNA vaccines evoke durable T cell immunity in adjuvant TNBC

Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is frequently associated with metastatic relapse, even at an early stage1. Here we assessed an individualized neoantigen mRNA vaccine in 14 patients with TNBC following surgery and after neoadjuvant or adjuvant therapy. In peripheral blood of nearly all patients, high-magnitude, vaccine-induced, mostly de novo T cell responses to multiple neoantigens were detected that remained functional for several years. Characterization of individual patients revealed that a large proportion of these T cells developed into two subsets: a late-differentiated phenotype with markers indicative of 'ready-to-act' cytotoxic effector T cells, and T cells with a stem cell-like memory phenotype. Eleven patients remained relapse-free for up to six years post-vaccination. Recurrence occurred in three patients: the individual with the weakest vaccine-induced T cell response relapsed, but achieved complete remission on subsequent anti-PD-1 therapy; another patient had a tumour with low major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I expression with MHC class I-deficient cells growing out under vaccination; and the third patient was BRCA-positive and had a recurrence from a genetically distinct primary tumour. These findings demonstrate the feasibility of individualized RNA vaccines in TNBC, document persistence of vaccine-induced, functional neoantigen-specific T cells and provide insights into possible immune escape mechanisms that will guide future approaches.