Search results for "Immune system"

showing 10 items of 2885 documents

Microbiome symbionts and diet diversity incur costs on the immune system of insect larvae

2017

Communities of symbiotic microorganisms that colonize the gastrointestinal tract play an important role in food digestion and protection against opportunistic microbes. Diet diversity increases the number of symbionts in the intestines, a benefit that is considered to impose no cost for the host organism. However, less is known about the possible immunological investments that hosts have to make in order to control the infections caused by symbiont populations that increase due to diet diversity. By using taxonomical composition analysis of the 16S rRNA V3 region, we show that Enterococci are the dominating group of bacteria in the midgut of the larvae of the greater wax moth (Galleria mell…

DNA Bacterial0301 basic medicineanimal structuresPhysiology030106 microbiologyAntimicrobial peptidesMothsAquatic ScienceMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesImmune systemImmunityRNA Ribosomal 16SAnimalsHerbivoryMicrobiomeMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOrganismBacteriabiologyfungiGastrointestinal Microbiomebiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationImmunity InnateGastrointestinal MicrobiomeGalleria mellonella030104 developmental biologyLarvaInsect Scienceta1181bacteriaAnimal Science and Zoologyhuman activitiesBacteriaJournal of Experimental Biology
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RNA mediated toll-like receptor stimulation in health and disease

2012

Besides their well known functions in storage and translation of information nucleic acids have emerged as a target of pattern recognition receptors that drive activation of innate immunity. Due to the paucity of building block monomers used in nucleic acids, discrimination of host and microbial nucleic acids as a means of self/foreign discrimination is a complicated task. Pattern recognition receptors rely on discrimination by sequence, structural features and spatial compartmentalization to differentiate microbial derived nucleic acids from host ones. Microbial nucleic acid detection is important for the sensing of infectious danger and initiating an immune response to microbial attack. F…

DNA BacterialReviewComputational biologyBiologyAutoimmune DiseasesImmune systemAnimalsHumansinfectionsRNA Small Interferinginnate immunityMolecular BiologyToll-like receptorInnate immune systemBacteriaBase SequenceToll-Like ReceptorsautoimmunityPattern recognition receptormodificationsRNATranslation (biology)Bacterial InfectionsCell BiologyCompartmentalization (psychology)Immunity InnateNucleic acidsRNA BacterialImmunologyNucleic acidNucleic Acid Conformationtoll-like receptorProtein BindingRNA Biology
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Local dimensionality reduction and supervised learning within natural clusters for biomedical data analysis

2006

Inductive learning systems were successfully applied in a number of medical domains. Nevertheless, the effective use of these systems often requires data preprocessing before applying a learning algorithm. This is especially important for multidimensional heterogeneous data presented by a large number of features of different types. Dimensionality reduction (DR) is one commonly applied approach. The goal of this paper is to study the impact of natural clustering--clustering according to expert domain knowledge--on DR for supervised learning (SL) in the area of antibiotic resistance. We compare several data-mining strategies that apply DR by means of feature extraction or feature selection w…

Databases FactualComputer scienceFeature extractionInformation Storage and RetrievalFeature selectionMachine learningcomputer.software_genreModels BiologicalPattern Recognition AutomatedImmune systemArtificial IntelligenceDrug Resistance BacterialCluster AnalysisHumansComputer SimulationElectrical and Electronic EngineeringRepresentation (mathematics)Cluster analysisCross Infectionbusiness.industryDimensionality reductionSupervised learningGeneral MedicineAnti-Bacterial AgentsComputer Science ApplicationsData pre-processingData miningArtificial intelligenceMultidimensional systemsbusinesscomputerAlgorithmsBiotechnology
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Thromboinflammation and Vascular Dysfunction.

2018

Thromboinflammation and vascular dysfunction are inseparably combined with the innate and the adaptive immune response. While the role of this interplay has gained considerable attention in the arena of atherosclerosis/atherothrombosis and in deep vein thrombosis, its role in other forms of vascular disease and risk factors is currently emerging. In this brief review, we will focus on thromboinflammation with regard to cytokine signalling as well as on the novel role of a vascular coagulation-inflammatory circuit in arterial hypertension.Thrombo-Inflammation und vaskuläre Dysfunktion sind untrennbar mit dem angeborenen und dem erworbenen Immunsystem verbunden. Dieses Zusammenspiel wurde im …

Deep veinInflammation030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyBioinformatics03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineImmune systemCoagulation cascademedicineAnimalsHumansCytokine signallingBlood CoagulationInflammationbusiness.industryVascular diseaseThrombosisHematologymedicine.diseaseAcquired immune systemThrombosismedicine.anatomical_structureBlood Vesselsmedicine.symptombusiness030215 immunologyHamostaseologie
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Suppression of humoral immune response against herpes simplex virus induced by defective strains, ts- and TK- mutants.

1988

Suppression of humoral antibody formation against HSV is not only induced by replicating Herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) but also by the defective strain ANG and the deletion mutant 1301 of Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1). Moreover, ts-mutants A, H, K, S, 1201 and 1208 of HSV-1 as well as some ts-mutants of HSV-2 and “defective-interfering” particles of HSV-1 after high multiplicity of infection-passages induced suppression. Treatment of infected mice with ACG reduced antibody-formation but did not result in suppression. UV-irradiation of the antibody producing strain Len of HSV-1 strongly reduces antibody formation and induces suppression. Experiments using a series of intertypic r…

Deletion mutantGenes ViralvirusesMutantBiologymedicine.disease_causeAntibodies ViralVirus ReplicationGenomeThymidine KinaseMiceImmune systemVirologyViral InterferencemedicineImmune ToleranceAnimalsSimplexvirusRecombination GeneticDefective VirusesGeneral MedicineVirologyHerpes simplex virusHumoral immunityMutationbiology.proteinViral diseaseAntibodyArchives of virology
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Cross-talk between Vβ8+and γδ+T lymphocytes in contact sensitivity

1998

We have previously reported that T lymphocytes proliferating in vitro to the hapten trinitrochlorobenzene (TNCB) exhibit a very restricted V beta gene usage and response to TNCB is limited to T-cell receptors (TCR) composed of V beta 8.2 in combination with V alpha 3.2, V alpha 8 and V alpha 10. This paper investigates the role played by T lymphocytes expressing the V beta 8.2 gene segment in the contact sensitivity (CS) reaction to TNCB in the intact mouse and in its passive transfer into naive recipient mice. Mice injected with monoclonal antibodies to V beta 8 are unable to develop CS upon immunization with TNCB and 4-day TNCB-immune lymph node cells from mice that had been depleted in v…

Delta cellPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyeducation.field_of_studyGamma/Delta T-LymphocyteImmunologyPopulationT-cell receptorT lymphocyteBiologyMolecular biologyImmune systemAntigenmedicineImmunology and AllergyeducationBeta (finance)Immunology
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Role of γδ T lymphocytes in immune response in humans and mice

1998

T lymphocytes recognize antigen through the T cell receptor. T cells expressing the gamma delta T cell receptor have been found in many species. Whereas murine alpha beta T cells are concentrated in the lymphoid organs, gamma delta T cells represent only a minor population in the adult thymus and peripheral lymphoid organs (less than 5% of the population). However, murine gamma delta cells predominate in epidermis, in epithelial layers of small intestine, in lung, and in female reproductive organs. In contrast, human gamma delta cells predominate in lymphoid organs. Despite extensive progress in the molecular characterization of the gamma delta T cell receptor and its genes, the physiologic…

Delta celleducation.field_of_studyPolymers and PlasticsbiologyGamma/Delta T-LymphocyteT-cell receptorPopulationMajor histocompatibility complexCell biologyTCIRG1Immune systemAntigenImmunologybiology.proteineducationGeneral Environmental Science
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Immunosurveillance by gamma delta T cells - lessons from the cancer field

2010

The most common contemporary depiction of the immune response is an early innate response, mounted by myeloid cells, followed by a delayed adaptive lymphoid responses mounted by lymphocytes. This depiction is based on myriad compelling data sets and has made powerful predictions with biological and clinical relevance. Nonetheless, it seems incomplete. Thus, there are lymphocytes that respond very rapidly, commonly to self-encoded molecules over-expressed by dysregulated and/or transformed tissues and cells. The evidence for such “lymphoid stress-surveillance” by gamma delta T cells has been provided by animal models, and supports ongoing clinical investigations of the potential host-protect…

DeltaMedicine(all)Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology(all)Innate lymphoid cellCancerInflammationGeneral MedicineBiologymedicine.diseaseGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyImmunosurveillanceInvited Lecture PresentationImmune systemInnate responseMyeloid cellsImmunologymedicinemedicine.symptomJournal of Translational Medicine
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The development of synthetic antitumour vaccines from mucin glycopeptide antigens.

2013

Based on important cell-biological and biochemical results concerning the structural difference between membrane glycoproteins of normal epithelial cells and epithelial tumour cells, tumour-associated glycopeptide antigens have been chemically synthesised and structurally confirmed. Glycopeptide structures of the tandem repeat sequence of mucin MUC1 of epithelial tumour cells constitute the most promising tumour-associated antigens. In order to generate a sufficient immunogenicity of these endogenous structures, usually tolerated by the immune system, these synthetic glycopeptide antigens were conjugated to immune stimulating components: in fully synthetic two-component vaccines either with…

DendrimersVaccines SyntheticChemistryImmunogenicityT-LymphocytesMucin-1ToxoidGeneral ChemistryCancer VaccinesEpitopeGlycopeptideAntibodiesImmune systemEpitope mappingAntigenNeoplasmsImmunologyTetanus ToxoidAnimalsHumansMUC1Epitope MappingChemical Society reviews
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Echinoderm Antimicrobial Peptides

2016

Abstract Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are widely expressed in organisms and have been linked to innate and acquired immunity in vertebrates. These compounds are constitutively expressed from different cellular types to interact directly with infectious agents and/or modulate immunoreactions. In invertebrates, including echinoderms, which lack a vertebrate-type adaptive immune system, AMPs represent the major humoral defense system against infection, showing a diverse spectrum of action mechanisms, most of them related to plasma membrane disturbance and lethal alteration of microbial integrity. Here, we summarize the knowledge of AMPs in echinoderms as Strongylocins identified in the sea ur…

DeuterostomeImmune systemInnate immune systembiologyEchinodermHolothuria tubulosaAntimicrobial peptidesbiology.organism_classificationAcquired immune systemStrongylocentrotus purpuratusCell biology
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