Chloroquine gets soluble antigens out of endosomes (right) and into the cytoplasm (left).

Intracellular antacids boost cytotoxic T cell responses, according to a study on page 817. Accapezzato and colleagues show that an inhibitor that prevents endosome acidification enhances presentation of antigens to CD8+ T cells and boosts vaccine responses.

Many vaccines are made of soluble proteins derived from viruses or bacteria. But these vaccines tend to be poor stimulators of CD8+ T cells, as soluble antigens are primarily degraded in acidified endosomes; the resulting peptides are loaded onto MHC class II molecules and presented to CD4+ helper T cells. But in certain cell types, exogenous antigen can escape from endosomes and enter the cytosol. From there, the antigen can infiltrate the class I MHC processing pathway—which is normally reserved for internally synthesized proteins—and be cross-presented to CD8+ T cells....

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