What is a virulence plasmid? What viruses go through the lysogenic cycle? What is neutrophil dysfunction? What kind of virus infects bacteria? Which word in microbiology means 'self'? What was the golden age of microbiology? What is a HLAC in virology?
What is a nucleosome in virology? What is a HLAC in virology? What is VSV virology? What is CMI in virology? What does VIF stand for in virology? What is a CTL in virology? What is clinical virology? What is a virology laboratory?
In contrast to normal differentiated cells, which rely primarily on mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation to generate the energy needed for cellular processes, most cancer cells instead rely on aerobic glycolysis, a phenomenon termed "the Warburg effect." Aerobic glycolysis is an inefficient way to gen...
In spite HLA polymorphism distribution has some variations between major ethnic groups, in a US study by Beatty et al. (Human Immunology, 2000), 10 000 donors provided a 4/6 HLA-match for patient in every group using the conventional CB match criteria (low resolution for HLA-A,-B and ...
The Wilms tumor protein, WT-1, is a widely recognized tumor antigen that is aberrantly expressed in myeloid and lymphoid leukemia and in this issue of Blood, Doubrovina et al report the most extensive catalog heretofore of HLA-restricted immunogenic peptides derived from WT-1, which are recogn...
Drug hypersensitivity reactions constitute type B reactions, meaning they are not predictable based on the primary pharmacology of the drug, but instead are dependent on specific genetic (e.g., HLA alleles, which encode antigen presenting proteins) and environmental (e.g., disease) factors, and ...
(This article belongs to the SectionNutritional Immunology) Downloadkeyboard_arrow_down Browse Figure Versions Notes Abstract Kiwifruitallergy is an emerging pathological condition in both general and pediatric populations with a wide range of symptoms linked to variable molecular patterns, justifying systemic...
Moreover, the viral glycoprotein (gp42) acts as a cofactor binding to human leucocyte antigen (HLA) class II molecules on B-lymphocytes. Memory B-cells are the virus reservoir in healthy people; hence, through this hiding mechanism (latency), the virus may elude the immune system. EBV-...
HLAI HLAIR HLAL HLAML HLAN HLAO HLAP HLAPI HLAR HLARC HLARG HLARR HLAS HLASD HLASIK HLASM HLAT HLAV HLAW HLAYK HLB HLBA HLBC HLBF HLBI HLBL HLBNY HLBO HLBOR HLBP HLBR HLBS HLBT HLBW HLC HLCA HLCADS HLCB HLCC HLCCA ...
Is there a correlation between the frequency of Treg cells and disease severity or prognosis in patients with multiple myeloma? 3. What are the effects of drugs on Treg cells in multiple myeloma, and what are the applications of treg cells in therapy?