Search results for "immune system"
showing 10 items of 2885 documents
Immunological Activity of Ascidian Hemocytes
2001
In ascidians, various hemocyte types and their differentiation stages may be responsible for several immune functions. A central role in the immune effector mechanisms can be assigned to PO-containing hemocytes and prophenoloxidase system. Morula cell in Styela plicata and univacuolar refringent granulocyte in Ciona intestinalis, a probable intermediate stages in the differentiation pathway of morula cell, may be cytotoxic cells. They are involved in immune reactions of solitary and colonial ascidians. We have shown that they are provided with a PO-linked spontaneous cytotoxic activity and recognize mammalian erythrocytes or tumor cells markers. The toxic molecules can be radical oxygen int…
Achieving dendritic cell subset-specific targeting in vivo by site-directed conjugation of targeting antibodies to nanocarriers
2021
AbstractThe major challenge of nanocarrier-based anti-cancer vaccination approaches is the targeted delivery of antigens and immunostimulatory agents to cells of interest, such as specific subtypes of dendritic cells (DCs), in order to induce robust antigen-specific anti-tumor responses. An undirected cell and body distribution of nanocarriers can lead to unwanted delivery to other immune cell types like macrophages reducing the vaccine efficacy. An often-used approach to overcome this issue is the surface functionalization of nanocarriers with targeting moieties, such as antibodies, mediating cell type-specific interaction. Numerous studies could successfully prove the targeting efficiency…
Modulation of immune parameters of roach, Rutilus rutilus, exposed to untreated ECF and TCF bleached pulp effluents
2000
Abstract The present study was designed to assess the effects of elemental chlorine free (ECF) and totally chlorine free (TCF) pulp and paper mill effluents on the immune defence of the roach ( Rutilus rutilus ). Fish were exposed for 5 weeks to concentrations of 0, 0.6, 2, 6 and 20% of untreated effluents from ECF or TCF bleaching processes. In order to study the capability to respond to foreign antigens the fish were immunised with bovine γ-globulin (BGG) 3 weeks before sampling. The numbers of anti-BGG antibody-secreting cells and immunoglobulin-secreting cells in the spleen and blood, as well as the levels of the anti-BGG antibodies and concentrations of immunoglobulin in plasma and the…
Murine Model of Cytomegalovirus Latency and Reactivation
2008
Efficient resolution of acute cytopathogenic cytomegalovirus infection through innate and adaptive host immune mechanisms is followed by lifelong maintenance of the viral genome in host tissues in a state of replicative latency, which is interrupted by episodes of virus reactivation for transmission. The establishment of latency is the result of aeons of co-evolution of cytomegaloviruses and their respective host species. Genetic adaptation of a particular cytomegalovirus to its specific host is reflected by private gene families not found in other members of the cytomegalovirus group, whereas basic functions of the viral replicative cycle are encoded by public gene families shared between …
Staphylococcus prevails in the skin microbiota of long-term immunodeficient mice
2012
Summary Host-commensal relationships in the skin are a complex system governed by variables related to the host, the bacteria and the environment. A disruption of this system may lead to new steady states, which, in turn, may lead to disease. We have studied one such disruption by characterizing the skin micro- biota in healthy and immunodepressed (ID) mice. A detailed anatomopathological study failed to reveal any difference between the skin of healthy and ID mice. We sequenced the 16S rDNA V1-V2 gene region to saturation in 10 healthy and 10 ID 8 week- old mice, and found than all of the healthy and two of the ID mice had bacterial communities that were similar in composition to that of h…
SAT0373 Role of Inkt Cells in Patients with Primary Sjogren Syndrome
2015
Background iNKT cells represent a T cell subset at the bridge between innate and adaptive immunity, playing a role in regulating auto-antibody-producing B cells before their entry into germinal centers. Therefore the absence and/or reduction of iNKT cells seem to increase auto-reactive B cell activation. Primary Sjogren9s syndrome (pSS) is a systemic autoimmune disease in which lymphocyte infiltration and organization in lymphoid structures of inflamed salivary glands occur. Objectives The aim of this study was to investigate the frequency of iNKT in the salivary glands and peripheral blood of patients with pSS and their function by using CD1d/aGalactosylceramide (aGalaCer) tetramers. Metho…
Evolution and Immune Function of Fish Lectins
2016
Abstract Lectins are sugar-binding proteins widely distributed among animals, plants, and microbial taxon, involved in diverse biological processes. In both invertebrates and vertebrates, they play key roles in nonself recognition and immune responses, such as nonself recognition, inflammatory processes, and immunomodulation. In fish, many lectin families have been identified, and their tissue-specific expression and localization of the various lectin repertoires and their ligands are consistent with their distinct biological roles in innate and adaptive immunity. Here, we discuss the involvement of F-type lectins, rhamnose-binding lectins, galectins, and C-type lectins in pathogen recognit…
The CD38-Positive and CD38-Negative Subsets of CD34(high)-Positive Primary Acute Myeloid Leukemia Blasts Differ Considerably in the Expression of Imm…
2008
Abstract Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is thought to arise from a rare putative ‘leukemic stem cell’ that is capable of self-renewal and formation of leukemic blasts. Serial xenotransplantation studies in immunodeficient mice have shown that this leukemia-initiating cell resides at very low numbers within CD34(high)-positive CD38-negative AML cells. Thus, immunotherapeutic approaches successfully eradicating this cell compartment should result in cure from disease. The objective of our study was to characterize the immune phenotype of the CD38-negative and CD38-positive subsets of primary CD34(high)-positive AML blasts ex vivo. We obtained therapeutic leukapheresis products from 17 AML patie…
Induction of (2′−5′)oligoadenylate synthetase in the marine spongesSuberites domunculaandGeodia cydoniumby the bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide
2002
Recent studies have shown that the Porifera, with the examples of the demosponges Suberites domuncula and Geodia cydonium, comprise a series of pathways found also in the immune system of Deuterostomia, such as vertebrates, but are absent in Protostomia, with insects or nematodes as examples. One pathway is the (2'-5')oligoadenylate synthetase [(2-5)A synthetase] system. In the present study we show that crude extracts from tissue of S. domuncula collected from the sea display a considerable amount of (2-5)A synthetase activity; 16% of the ATP substrate is converted to the (2-5)A product, while tissue from specimens which were kept for 6 months in an aquarium shows only 1% of conversion. As…
Ultraviolet B Irradiation Modulates the Immune System of Fish (Rutilus rutilus, Cyprinidae) Part III: Lymphocytes¶
2001
Abstract The effects of short-term exposure to ultraviolet B (UVB) radiation on lymphocyte-related parameters were studied under controlled laboratory conditions using roach (Rutilus rutilus), a cyprinid teleost, as the model fish. In vitro lymphoproliferative responses stimulated with a T-cell–specific mitogen, concanavalin A (ConA), or a B-cell–specific activator, lipopolysaccharide (LPS), were decreased in exposed fish. Also nonstimulated proliferation was lower than in unexposed fish. ConA-activated responses returned to normal levels within 7 days after exposure, but LPS-activated responses were reduced throughout the 14 day follow-up. The capability of UVB-exposed fish to produce an a…