Measles virus remains among the most potent global pathogens killing more than 1 million children annually. A profound suppression of general immune functions occurs during and for weeks after the acute disease, which favors secondary infections. In contrast, virus-specific immune responses are efficiently generated, mediate viral control and clearance and confer a long-lasting immunity. Because they sense pathogen-associated molecular patterns, and subsequently initiate and shape adaptive immune responses, professional antigen-presenting cells (APC) such as dendritic cells are likely to play a key role in the induction and quality of the virus-specific immune response. Key features of immune suppression associated with measles virus, however, are compatible with interference with APC maturation and function and subsequent qualitative and quantitative alterations of T cell activation.