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showing 10 items of 14944 documents

PATHOGENESIS OF HUMAN LEUKOCYTE ANTIGEN B27–POSITIVE ARTHRITIS

1998

Acute reactive arthritis, spondyloarthropathy (SpA) in association with chronic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and ankylosing spondylitis (AS), although differing in individual presentation and in the natural course of disease, have in common a strong association with human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-B27 and a possible involvement of other genetic and also environmental factors. This group of related diseases belonging to the seronegative SpAs represents the clearest example of HLA class 1–linked disease in humans. Several newly emerging animal models of the SpAs, which have been reviewed in this issue of the Rheumatic Disease Clinics of North America , have permitted us to investigate the i…

musculoskeletal diseasesSpondyloarthropathyArthritisPeptide bindingHuman leukocyte antigenDiseaseBiologymedicine.diseasemedicine.disease_causeAutoimmunityRheumatologyAntigenImmunologymedicineReactive arthritisRheumatic Disease Clinics of North America
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Type V collagen counteracts osteo-differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells

2014

In search of novel gene signatures for osteo-differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), we submitted cDNA preparations from undifferentiated and differentiating MSCs to differential display- and semiquantitative-PCR and found down-regulation of COL5A1 in osteo-induced cultures at days 21 and 28, when the mineralized matrix accumulates. We also cultured osteo-differentiating MSCs onto type V collagen substrates and found a decrease in the accumulation of extracellular calcium compared to those grown in uncoated flasks. To our knowledge, this is first evidence that type V collagen might represent a stromal component that impairs osteogenesis.

musculoskeletal diseasesStromal cellchemistry.chemical_elementDown-RegulationBioengineeringBiologyMatrix (biology)CalciumApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyOsteogenesisGene expressionExtracellularHumansSettore BIO/06 - Anatomia Comparata E CitologiaCells CulturedPharmacologyDifferential displayOsteoblastsGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyMesenchymal stem cellCell DifferentiationMesenchymal Stem CellsGeneral MedicineMolecular biologychemistryembryonic structurescollagen stem cells osteogenesis gene expressionStem cellCollagen Type VBiotechnology
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An update on the relationships between rheumatoid arthritis and atherosclerosis

2010

Rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic inflammatory disease. Cardiovascular events are the most important cause of mortality and morbidity in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Beyond the traditional cardiovascular risk factors, chronic systemic inflammation has been shown to be a crucial factor in atherosclerosis development and progression from endothelial dysfunction to plaque rupture and thrombosis. Many studies have shown that atherosclerosis is not a passive event like accumulation of lipids in the vessel walls; by contrast, it represents an active inflammation of the vessels. Inflammatory cells such as macrophages, monocytes and T cells play important roles in the development of both rhe…

musculoskeletal diseasesT-LymphocytesAtherosclerosis Rheumatoid arthritis Inflammation Cardiovascular risk10265 Clinic for Endocrinology and DiabetologyInflammation610 Medicine & healthComorbiditySystemic inflammationModels BiologicalMonocytes2705 Cardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineArthritis RheumatoidRisk FactorsImmunopathologymedicineHumansEndothelial dysfunctionAutoimmune diseaseInflammationbusiness.industryVascular diseaseMacrophagesmedicine.diseaseAtherosclerosisThrombosisOxidative StressCardiovascular DiseasesRheumatoid arthritisImmunologyDisease Progressionmedicine.symptomInsulin ResistanceCardiology and Cardiovascular Medicinebusiness
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297: Establishment of a chimeric NOD-scid/IL2RγcNull transplantation-model to evaluate graft-vs-host and graft-vs-leukemia immune responses of ex viv…

2007

musculoskeletal diseasesTransplantationbusiness.industryHost (biology)NodT lymphocyteHematologymedicine.diseaseVirologyTransplantationstomatognathic diseasesLeukemiaImmune systemimmune system diseaseshemic and lymphatic diseasesImmunologyMedicinebusinessEx vivoBiology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation
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Non-conventional forms of HLA-B27 are expressed in spondyloarthritis joints and gut tissue

2016

Objectives Human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-B27 (B27) is the strongest genetic factor associated with development of Ankylosing Spondylitis and other spondyloarthropathies (SpA), yet the role it plays in disease pathogenesis remains unclear. We investigated the expression of potentially pathogenic non-conventional heavy chain forms (NC) of B27 in synovial and intestinal tissues obtained from SpA patients. We also determined the presence of NC-B27 in joints, lymphoid and gastrointestinal tissue from B27 transgenic (TG1) rats with M.tuberculosis-induced SpA. Methods Expression of NC-B27 in human SpA joints and gut and in (21-3 × 283-2)F1 HLA-B27/Huβ2m rat tissue was determined by immunohistochem…

musculoskeletal diseasesalpha-DefensinsHLA-B27 transgenic rat modelGastrointestinal DiseasesCD8 AntigensImmunologyGene ExpressionArticleSpondyloarthropathieAnimalsHumansHLA class I free-heavy chainImmunology and AllergySpondylitis AnkylosingSpondyloarthropathiesskin and connective tissue diseasesHLA-B27 AntigenHLA-B27CD11 AntigensHistocompatibility Antigens Class ISynovial MembraneReceptors KIR3DL2Arthritis ExperimentalR1HLA class I free-heavy chainsRatsDisease Models AnimalSettore MED/16 - ReumatologiaHLA class I free-heavy chains; HLA-B27; HLA-B27 transgenic rat model; Spondyloarthropathies; Immunology and Allergy; ImmunologyBone RemodelingRats Transgenic
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Persistence ofYersinia antigens in peripheral blood cells from patients withYersinia enterocolitica O:3 infection with or without reactive arthritis

1998

Objective To assess the persistence of bacterial antigens in peripheral blood cells from patients with Yersinia enterocolitica O:3-triggered reactive arthritis (ReA). Methods Peripheral blood samples were obtained from 20 patients with Y enterocolitica O:3 infection (11 with ReA and 9 without). These samples were studied by immunochemical techniques for the presence of Yersinia antigens at the beginning of infection and up to 4 years thereafter. Synovial fluid samples from 6 of the 11 ReA patients were also studied. Results The Yersinia antigens lipopolysaccharide and heat-shock protein (HSP) were detected in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and polymorphonuclear phagocytes from all patie…

musculoskeletal diseasesbiologyT cellImmunologyYersiniabiology.organism_classificationPeripheral blood mononuclear cellmedicine.anatomical_structureRheumatologyAntigenImmunologymedicinebiology.proteinImmunology and AllergySynovial fluidPharmacology (medical)Bacterial antigenAntibodyYersinia enterocoliticaArthritis & Rheumatism
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AB1057 risk factors associated with different lumbopelvic patterns of movement

2016

Background Rapid flexion movement increases the loading on the spine and it increases the risk of injuries 1 . In asymptomatic subjects lumbar-dominant and pelvis-dominant patterns of movement during trunk flexion have been observed 2,3 . However, little information about lumbar spine kinematics has been provided. Objectives To find out whether exhibiting different lumbopelvic patterns of movement during trunk flexion affects the kinematics of the lumbar spine in terms of velocity of motion. Methods Differential lumbar spine and pelvis angular displacement during the time course of a standardised sagittal trunk flexion from an upright position was recorded with an electromagnetic tracking d…

musculoskeletal diseasesbusiness.industryImmunologyBiomechanicsKinematicsAnatomyTorsomusculoskeletal systemTrunkGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologySagittal planeLumbarmedicine.anatomical_structureRheumatologymedicineImmunology and AllergyRange of motionbusinessPelvisAnnals of the Rheumatic Diseases
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Interleukin 1 Gene Polymorphisms Presumably Participate in the Pathogenesis of Chronic Spontaneous Autocreative Urticaria

2020

Recent studies underline a potential role of autoimmune and genetic disturbances in this disorder pathogenesis. Variants in genes related to inflammatory processes may possibly predispose to chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) occurrence. The objective of this study was to search for an association of Il1 genes polymorphisms with the pathogenesis of CSU. The examined group consisted of 153 unrelated chronic spontaneous autoreactive urticaria patients. The control group consisted of 104 unrelated healthy volunteers. In all studied subjects, IL1 rs1304037 and rs180058 polymorphisms were examined. The Urticaria Activity Score was used to assess disease intensity. The age of disease onset was a…

musculoskeletal diseasesbusiness.industryImmunologyHaplotypeInterleukinCell BiologyDiseaseinterleukin 1chronic urticariapolymorphismPathogenesis030207 dermatology & venereal diseases03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineVirologyImmunologyGenotypeMedicineAllelebusinessGeneChronic urticaria030215 immunologyJournal of Interferon and Cytokine Research
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Hla-Bb,Dr3 Phenotype and the Antibody Response Against Epstein-Barr Virus

1993

Antibodies against the viral capsid antigen (VCA) and nuclear antigens (EBNAs) of the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) were determined in a sample of Sicilian population. A significant correlation was observed between HLA-BB,DR3 phenotype and reduced titres of antibodies to EBNAs, whereas HLA-BB,DR3 positive individuals displayed levels of antibodies to VCA comparable to those of HLA-BB,DR3 negative ones. These results further strenghten the suggestion that HLA-BB,DR3 positive subjects are low responders and that the depth of immune response depends on on the fashion of antigenic challenge.

musculoskeletal diseaseseducation.field_of_studyvirusesImmunologyPopulationGeneral MedicineBiologymedicine.disease_causeVirologyEpstein–Barr virusHerpesviridaeVirusSerologyAntigenimmune system diseaseshemic and lymphatic diseasesImmunologyHumoral immunitymedicinebiology.proteinAntibodyeducationImmunological Investigations
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Pathogenesis of polymyalgia rheumatica

2018

Polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) is a chronic, inflammatory disorder of unknown cause, almost exclusively occurring in people aged over 50 and often associated with giant cell arteritis. The evidence that PMR occurs almost exclusively in individuals aged over 50 may indicate that age-related immune alterations in genetically predisposed subjects contribute to development of the disease. Several infectious agents have been investigated as possible triggers of PMR even though the results are inconclusive. Activation of the innate and adaptive immune systems has been proved in PMR patients as demonstrated by the activation of dendritic cells and monocytes/macrophages and the altered balance betwee…

musculoskeletal diseaseslcsh:Internal medicineGiant Cell ArteritisAdaptive immunityeducationlcsh:MedicineDiseaseT-Lymphocytes RegulatoryPathogenesisPolymyalgia rheumatica03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineImmune systemRheumatologyPathogenesiHumansMedicinelcsh:RC31-1245Giant Cell ArteritiB cellAgedInnate immunity030203 arthritis & rheumatologyB-LymphocytesEvidence-Based MedicineInnate immune systembusiness.industrylcsh:RPolymyalgia rheumaticaB-LymphocyteCell DifferentiationBiomarkerPathogenesis.medicine.diseaseAcquired immune systemImmunity InnateSettore MED/16 - ReumatologiaGiant cell arteritismedicine.anatomical_structure030220 oncology & carcinogenesisImmunologyTh17 CellsbusinessBiomarkersHumanReumatismo
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