Search results for " IMMUNITY"

showing 10 items of 618 documents

DIVERSITY OF LECTIN-SUGAR RECOGNITION SYSTEMS IN THE EVOLUTION OF FISH INNATE IMMUNITY

2014

Carbohydrate recognition and interactions mediated by lectins have been recognized involved in vertebrate innate immunity, not only for recognition of potential pathogens, but also acting in the agglutination, immobilization and other functional steps. Fish are equipped with a complex lectin repertoire that, like mammals, are involved almost all the immune reactions. On the basis of our results on the isolation, cDNA cloning, structural analysis, tissue expression and localization, and opsonic activity of F-type and RBL lectins from Dicentrarchus labrax and Sparus aurata we showed that: lectin repertoires in fish are highly diversified and include not only representatives of the lectin fami…

lectin fish immunity FBL RBLSettore BIO/05 - Zoologia
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Diversity of lectin-sugar recognition dystems in the evolution of fish innate immunity

2014

lectin fish innate immunity D. labrax S. aurata
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Data from: Survival after pathogen exposure in group-living insects: don’t forget the stress of social isolation!

2016

A major cost of group-living is its inherent risk of pathogen infection. To limit this risk, many group-living animals have developed the capability to prophylactically boost their immune system in the presence of group members and/or to mount collective defenses against pathogens. These two phenomena, called density dependent prophylaxis and social immunity, respectively, are often used to explain why, in group-living species, individuals survive better in groups than in isolation. However, this survival difference may also reflect an alternative and often overlooked process: a cost of social isolation on individuals’ capability to fight against infections. Here, we disentangled the effect…

medicine and health careMetarhiziumearwigfunguscollective immunityMedicineForficula auriculariaLife sciencessocial deprivation
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Data from: Surrounding pathogens shape maternal egg care but not egg production in the European earwig

2017

Pathogens are ubiquitous in nature and typically entail major fitness costs in their hosts. These costs can be particularly important when individuals exhibit poor immune defenses, as it is often the case during early developmental stages. Hence, selection should favor parental strategies limiting the risks of pathogen exposure and infection in their offspring. In this study, we investigated 1) whether females of the European earwig Forficula auricularia avoid areas contaminated with spores of the entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium brunneum prior to and at egg laying, as well as 2) whether spore presence entails an increase in females’ investment into both pre-hatching forms of care and cl…

medicine and health careSubsocialDermapteraembryonic structuresfungiMedicineSocial immunityForficula auriculariaLife sciences
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Data from: Host infection history modifies co-infection success of multiple parasite genotypes

2016

1. Co-infections by multiple parasite genotypes are common and have important implications for host-parasite ecology and evolution through within-host interactions. Typically, these infections take place sequentially and therefore, the outcome of co-infection may be shaped by host immune responses triggered by previous infections. For example, in vertebrates specific immune responses play a central role in protection against disease over the course of life, but co-infection research has mostly focused on previously uninfected individuals. 2. Here, we investigated whether sequential exposure and activation of host resistance in rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss affects infection success and …

medicine and health careacquired immunitygenotypeMedicineDiplostomum pseudospathaceumLife scienceswithin-host interactionCo-infection
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Data from: Aposematism in the burying beetle? Dual function of anal fluid in parental care and chemical defense

2017

Burying beetles (Nicrophorus vespilloides) bear distinctive and variable orange-black patterning on their elytra and produce an anal exudate from their abdomen when threatened. During breeding, the anal exudates contribute to the antimicrobial defense of the breeding resource. We investigated whether the anal exudates also provide a responsive chemical defense, which is advertised to potential avian predators by the beetle’s orange and black elytral markings. We found that that the orange-black elytral markings of the burying beetle are highly conspicuous for avian predators against range of backgrounds, by using computer simulations. Using bioassays with wood ants, we also showed that the …

medicine and health carevariation in colorationpublic goodswarning signalsChemical defenceSocial immunityMedicineLife sciences
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The Human Mammary Odour Factor: Variability and Regularities in Sources and Functions

2019

In the course of evolution, human mothers have been, and still are, under strong selective pressure to induce their newborns’ colostrum ingestion promptly after birth. As a concentrate of nutrients, passive immunity, antioxidants, growth factors and symbiotic microbiota, colostrum functions as the evolved antidote to ubiquitous pathogens and threats of neonatal exhaustion. Under such constraints, any means to speed up colostrum/milk intake can only have been beneficial to neonatal viability and adaptive life onset along evolutionary time. The areolar-nipple areas of human lactating females emit lacteal substrates conveying chemostimuli that are attractive and release mouthing and sucking in…

medicine.anatomical_structureAdaptive valueLactealmedicine.medical_treatmentmedicinePhysiologyIngestionColostrumPassive immunityBiologyMouthingAreolar glandsAreola
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Immunology of dermatophytosis

1983

By causing experimental lesions of dermatophytosis in rabbits inoculated and reinoculated with T. mentagrophytes var. granulosum and T. rubrum a study was carried out of the state of cellular immunity response, during infection, and also of the antigens responsible for the sensitization. Cellular immunity response was detected using the leucocyte migration test (L.M.T.) in the presence of antigenic compounds of the 'Keratinase' of Eleuterio et al.

medicine.medical_specialtyCellular immunityAntigens FungalTime FactorsVeterinary (miscellaneous)Applied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyMicrobiologyMedical microbiologyTineaTrichophytonAntigenLeukocytesmedicineAnimalsSensitizationImmunity CellularbiologyImmunity responseInoculationmedicine.anatomical_structureKeratinaseCell Migration InhibitionImmunologybiology.proteinbacteriaRabbitsAgronomy and Crop ScienceLeucocyte migrationMycopathologia
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Changes in lymphocyte subsets after cardiac surgery in children.

2001

Children undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) operations have an increased risk of developing severe infections. Impairment of the immune system may contribute to the development of sequelae such as capillary leaks, pulmonary dysfunction and auto-immune reactions. The objective of this study was to investigate the impact of cardiac surgery with CPB on the immune system of infants and young children. We conducted a prospective study to investigate the changes in circulating lymphocyte subpopulations in a sample of 21 consecutive infants and young children undergoing cardiac surgery for congenital heart disease. The following statistically significant (P<0.05) results were obtained: leucoc…

medicine.medical_specialtyCellular immunityHeart diseaseT-LymphocytesInflammationInfectionsLymphocyte ActivationGastroenterologylaw.inventionNatural killer cellImmunophenotypingLeukocyte CountImmune systemlawRisk FactorsStress PhysiologicalInternal medicineCardiopulmonary bypassMedicineHumansIL-2 receptorProspective StudiesInflammationB-LymphocytesCardiopulmonary Bypassbusiness.industryInfantmedicine.diseaseLymphocyte SubsetsCardiac surgeryKiller Cells Naturalmedicine.anatomical_structurePediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthImmunologymedicine.symptombusinessCell Adhesion MoleculesEuropean journal of pediatrics
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Vaccination greatly reduces disease, disability, death and inequity worldwide

2007

In low-income countries, infectious diseases still account for a large proportion of deaths, highlighting health inequities largely caused by economic differences. Vaccination can cut health-care costs and reduce these inequities. Disease control, elimination or eradication can save billions of US dollars for communities and countries. Vaccines have lowered the incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma and will control cervical cancer. Travellers can be protected against "exotic" diseases by appropriate vaccination. Vaccines are considered indispensable against bioterrorism. They can combat resistance to antibiotics in some pathogens. Noncommunicable diseases, such as ischaemic heart disease, c…

medicine.medical_specialtyHealth PromotionDiseaseGlobal HealthHerd immunityEnvironmental healthPreventive Health ServicesGlobal healthmedicineHumansDisabled PersonsMortalityPovertyHealth policyPovertyImmunization Programsbusiness.industryHealth PolicyPublic healthfungiVaccinationPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthfood and beveragesHealth Status DisparitiesVaccinationSocioeconomic FactorsAcute DiseaseChronic DiseaseLife expectancyPublic HealthPolicy and PracticebusinessBulletin of the World Health Organization
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