Injectable Hydrogels for Sustained Codelivery of Subunit Vaccines Enhance Humoral Immunity
Gillie A. Roth(Stanford University), Eric A. Appel(Palo Alto University), Hector Lopez Hernandez(Stanford University), Mark M. Davis(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Bali Pulendran(Stanford University), Qian Yin(Peking University), Caitlin L. Maikawa(Stanford University), Juliana Idoyaga(Stanford University), Eneko Axpe(Ames Research Center), Marcela Alcántara‐Hernández(Stanford University), Wei Luo(Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis), Anton A. A. Smith(Stanford University), Anthony C. Yu(Stanford University), Rohit Verma(Stanford University), Emily C. Gale(Stanford University)
Cited by 210
Related Papers
Supramolecular biomaterials
|Nature Materials|2015|1.6k
Expansion and Activation of CD103+ Dendritic Cell Progenitors at the Tumor Site Enhances Tumor Responses to Therapeutic PD-L1 and BRAF Inhibition
|Immunity|2016|1.2k
Supramolecular polymeric hydrogels
|Chemical Society Reviews|2012|1.1k
Translational Applications of Hydrogels
|Chemical Reviews|2021|1.1k
Systems biology of vaccination for seasonal influenza in humans
|Nature Immunology|2011|826