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Tejde A - - 2004
Immune complexes (IC) can induce cytokine production in vitro. While immune aggregates (IA) consisting of heat-aggregated gamma globulin (HAGG) as model IC increased interleukin (IL)-10 levels in cell cultures with native human serum, IL-12p40/p70 production was inhibited. Three series of experiments suggested that the effects of IA on IL-12 production ...
Inal Jameel M - - 2004
Many orthologous proteins of known mammalian receptors have been discovered in parasites. Besides disguising the parasite as self in terms of the host immune system, evidence is accumulating that these receptors link to signalling pathways in parasites that appear to be involved in their growth or development. Recently, several proteins ...
Russell S - - 2004
In the last 10 years, the human cell-surface molecule, CD46, has evolved from 'just another complement regulator' to a receptor for a striking array of pathogens. CD46 not only protects cells from complement-mediated attack and facilitates infection by a large number of pathogens, but also exerts complex effects on cellular ...
Melendez Alirio J - - 2004
The anaphylatoxin C5a is produced following the activation of the complement system and is associated with a variety of pathologies, including septic shock and adult respiratory distress syndrome, and with immune complex-dependent diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis. C5a has been shown to regulate inflammatory functions by interacting with its receptor, ...
Vincent Theresa - - 2004
Endothelial cells have the ability to change their complement of cell surface proteins in response to inflammatory cytokines. We hypothesized that the expression of the coxsackievirus-adenovirus receptor (CAR), a viral receptor and putative cell-cell adhesion molecule, may be altered during the response of endothelial cells to inflammation. To test this ...
Twining Carin M - - 2004
In inflammatory neuropathy, immune activation near intact peripheral nerves induces mechanical allodynia. The identity of the peripheral immune product(s) that lead to these changes in pain behavior is unknown. The present series of studies utilized the sciatic inflammatory neuropathy (SIN) model to examine this question. Here, inflammatory neuropathy is created ...
Mariotti Angelo - - 2004
Inflammation is the localized, protective response of the body to injury or infection. The classic clinical signs that characterize inflammation are heat, redness, swelling, pain, and loss of function. During inflammation, cells and their secreted chemicals attempt to destroy, dilute, or wall off the injurious agent. A series of biochemical ...
Nauta Alma J - - 2004
The complement system comprises a strong defense against various pathogens and is a major component of our innate immune system. While earlier studies have established a crucial role of complement in recognition, opsonization and enhanced phagocytosis of microorganisms by professional phagocytes such as polymorphonuclear leukocytes and macrophages, recent studies delineate ...
Fujita Teizo - - 2004
The complement system, composed of more than 30 serum and cell surface components, is collaborating in recognition and elimination of pathogens as a part of both the innate and acquired immune systems. The two collagenous lectins, mannose-binding lectin (MBL) and ficolins, are one of the pattern recognition molecules acting in ...
Hart Melanie L - - 2004
Ischemia and reperfusion of organs/tissues induce a state of inflammation that can lead to tissue injury. Focus on development of effective therapeutics based on sound pre-clinical work and the role of leukocytes in models of human disease has not lead to a successful clinical trial for anti-leukocyte technologies. For the ...
Hawlisch Heiko - - 2004
The complement system has long been recognized for its role as a lytic effector system that protects against microbial pathogens, as well as for its role in mediating acute and chronic inflammatory responses. Many of the inflammatory sequelae of complement activation can be related to the complement cleavage fragments C3a ...
Speth Cornelia - - 2004
Complement is one of the most critical defence tools against cerebral infections, but uncontrolled complement biosynthesis and activation can induce profound brain tissue damage. To clarify the role of complement in the pathogenesis of AIDS-associated neurological disorders, we analysed the synthesis of complement in the brains of SIV-infected rhesus macaques. ...
Rodríguez de Córdoba Santiago - - 2004
Factor H is an essential regulatory protein that plays a critical role in the homeostasis of the complement system in plasma and in the protection of bystander host cells and tissues from damage by complement activation. Genetic and structural data generated during recent years have been instrumental to delineate the ...
Devaux Patricia - - 2004
Measles virus (MV)-infected cells are activators of the alternative human complement pathway, resulting in high deposition of C3b on the cell surface. Activation was observed independent of whether CD46 was used as a cellular receptor and did not correlate with CD46 down-regulation. The virus itself was an activator of the ...
Castellano Giuseppe - - 2004
The interaction between different components of the immune system plays a pivotal role in the overall development of immune responses. Dendritic cells (DCs) and complement are essential components of innate immunity. They have been shown to be relevant both in the induction of adaptive immune responses and in maintenance of ...
Spiridon Camelia I - - 2004
PURPOSE: We have demonstrated previously that a mixture of three anti-Her-2 monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) that bind to different epitopes on the extracellular domain of Her-2 expressed on a human breast cancer cell line has more potent antitumor activity than the individual MAbs both in vitro and in xenografted severe combined ...
Arumugam Thiruma V - - 2004
Ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury is a common clinical event with the potential to seriously affect, and sometimes kill, the patient. Interruption of blood supply causes ischemia, which rapidly damages metabolically active tissues. Paradoxically, restoration of blood flow to the ischemic tissues initiates a cascade of pathology that leads to additional cell ...
Bellander Bo-Michael - - 2004
The complement cascade has been suggested to be involved in development of secondary brain damage following traumatic brain injury (TBI). Previous studies have shown that reactive microglia are involved in activation of the complement cascade following various injuries to the nervous system. Macrophages seem to have a significant role in ...
McGeer Patrick L - - 2004
The immunohistochemical demonstration of reactive microglia and activated complement components suggests that chronic inflammation occurs in affected brain regions in Parkinson's disease (PD). Evidence from humans and monkeys exposed to MPTP indicates this inflammation may persist many years after the initial stimulus has disappeared. Chronic inflammation can damage host cells. ...
Wen Leana - - 2004
The complement system provides innate defense against microbial pathogens and is a "complement" to humoral (antibody-mediated) immunity. Consisting of plasma and membrane proteins, this proinflammatory system works in part by a cascade involving limited proteolysis whereby one component activates the next, resulting in a dramatic amplification. The overall goal is ...
Roos Anja - - 2004
Apoptotic cells can be recognized and taken up by both macrophages and dendritic cells. Phagocytosis of apoptotic cells generally leads to active suppression of cytokine production by professional phagocytes. This is different from the response towards cells that die by necrosis, which induce a pro-inflammatory cytokine profile. Uptake of apoptotic ...
Raftos David A - - 2004
This study investigates the exocytic responses of invertebrate hemocytes to pathogen-associated antigens. It demonstrates that a homologue of complement component C3, a key defensive protein of the innate immune system, is expressed by phagocytic hemocytes (non-refractile vacuolated cells) of the tunicate, Styela plicata. C3-like molecules are localized in sub-cellular vesicles ...
Mizuno M - - 2004
The complement system is a key component of innate immunity, acting to protect the host from micro-organisms such as bacteria and other "foreign" threats, including tumor cells. However, excessive activation of complement can injure the host and can even be life threatening. These toxic effects are caused primarily by the ...
Molina Hector - - 2004
Our body is in constant interaction with the environment. Some of the interactions involve the recognition and disposal of foreign substances that may harm the delicate balance between health and disease. The foreign elements, or antigens, include infectious organisms and lifeless macromolecules. The ability of the body to recognize what ...
Niculescu Florin - - 2004
Atherosclerosis is a chronic inflammatory disease in which dyslipidemia, inflammation, and the immune system play an important pathogenetic role. A role in atherogenesis was demonstrated for monocyte/macrophages, complement system, and T-lymphocytes. Complement activation and C5b-9 deposition occurs both in human and experimental atherosclerosis. Complement C6 deficiency has a protective effect ...
Tsokos George C - - 2004
Proteins of the complement system limit the expression of systemic autoimmunity by raising the threshold for negative selection and, in their absence, autoreactive lymphocytes seem to enter the periphery. On the other hand, complement activation in the course of systemic autoimmunity leads to tissue injury in a number of ways ...
Blom A M - - 2004
The complement system is an important part of innate immunity providing immediate protection against pathogens without a need for previous exposure. Its importance is clearly shown by the fact that patients lacking complement components suffer from fulminant and recurring infections. Complement is an explosive cascade, and in order to control ...
Acosta Juan - - 2004
By-products of complement activation and complement regulatory proteins are increasingly recognized to play an important pathogenic role in a variety of vascular diseases including atherosclerosis, ischemia and reperfusion injury, hyperacute graft rejection, vasculitis, and the vascular complications of human diabetes. "Self" damage by autologous complement is mediated by activation products ...
Benson Elizabeth M - - 2004
Management of the pregnant woman with the antiphospholipid syndrome (APLS) has improved over the last 10 years. The recurrent pregnancy loss that is associated with this disease is managed with prophylactic low dose aspirin and heparin therapy. This therapy leads to a 40% absolute risk reduction in pregnancy loss. However, ...
Villiers Marie-Bernadette - - 2004
Most of the biological processes depend on cell-to-cell and protein-to-cell interactions, which take place through receptors present on the cell surface. Various physiological systems are linked by such interactions, as is the case for innate and adaptative immune response. There is increasing evidence that two of the main actors involved ...
Józsi M - - 2004
Complement is a central element of innate immunity and this vital defense system initiates and coordinates immediate immune reactions which attack and eliminate microbes, foreign particles and altered self cells. Newly generated activation products are extremely toxic and consequently, activation is highly restricted in terms of time and space. The ...
Quigg Richard J - - 2004
The renal glomerulus is the specialized structure in the kidney responsible for generating over 150 liters of plasma ultrafiltrate per day in humans. Certain characteristics of this structure favor involvement in autoimmune diseases. Formation of immune complexes in the glomerulus, either deposited from the circulation or generated in situ, can ...
Liu Chau-Ching - - 2004
Deficiencies in the classical pathway of the complement system have been implicated in the etiology and pathogenesis of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) for several decades. Recent advances have suggested that this link is due to a critical role of complement in the recognition and clearance of the cellular remnants of ...
Song Wen-Chao - - 2004
The complement system plays a complex role in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases. It inhibits autoimmunity development by helping to maintain self-tolerance and/or by facilitating the disposal of immune complexes and apoptotic cell antigens. On the other hand, complement activation is thought to contribute significantly to end organ damage in ...
McMahon Stephanie - - 2003
The mammalian convertase furin plays a significant role in tumorigenesis and its overexpression was observed in a number of different cancer types. To date, however, few mechanisms of action have been described. Most of the information available concerns the invasion step and designates MT1-MMP, through the activation of MMP-2, as ...
Chan R K - - 2003
BACKGROUND: Reperfusion injury is a common clinical problem that lacks effective therapy. Two decades of research implicating oxygen free radicals and neutrophils has not led to a single successful clinical trial. METHODS: The aim was to review new clinical and preclinical data pertaining to the alleviation of reperfusion injury. A ...
Saeij Jeroen P J - - 2003
Although Trypanoplasma borreli induces the production of non-specific antibodies, survival of infection is associated with the production of T. borreli specific antibodies, able to lyse this parasite in the presence of complement. During the lag phase of this acquired immune response, innate immune mechanisms must limit multiplication of T. borreli. ...
Rocha Paulo N - - 2003
Antigens, provided by the allograft, trigger the activation and proliferation of allospecific T cells. As a consequence of this response, effector elements are generated that mediate graft injury and are responsible for the clinical manifestations of allograft rejection. Donor-specific CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes play a major role in this process. ...
Verschoor Admar - - 2003
The complement system, in addition to its role in innate immunity, is an important regulator of the B cell response. Complement exists predominantly in the circulation and although the primary source is hepatic, multiple additional cellular sources have been described that can contribute substantially to the complement pool. To date, ...
Ali Farzana - - 2003
Opsonization enhances Streptococcus pneumoniae-induced human monocyte-derived macrophage (MDM) apoptosis. Both depletion of complement and immunoglobulin from opsonizing serum and blockade of the macrophages CR1, CR3, FcgammaRII, and FcgammaRIII partially decreased MDM apoptosis after S. pneumoniae phagocytosis, and these effects correlated with reduced numbers of internalized bacteria. Chloramphenicol inhibition of protein ...
Lee Sun-Hwa - - 2003
Through co-evolution with their hosts, viruses have developed a variety of immune escape and control mechanisms. In addition to strategies used to avoid the cellular and humoral immune responses, many viral families encode proteins capable of neutralizing the host's first line of defense, complement. The diversity of these complement avoidance ...
Andrews Ellen - - 2003
The mechanisms that control complement protein synthesis are incompletely understood. Recent evidence suggests that cytokines are involved in the regulation of hepatic synthesis of circulating complement components. Therefore, we compared the effects of human recombinant IL-1alpha, IL-1beta, IL-6, IFN-gamma, and TNF-alpha individually or in combination, on HepG2 secretion of complement ...
Laumonier Thomas - - 2003
BACKGROUND: The innate immune system, including complement and natural killer (NK) cells, plays a critical role in activation and damage of endothelial cells (ECs) during xenograft rejection. The semisynthetic proteoglycan analog dextran sulfate (DXS, molecular weight 5,000) is known to inhibit the complement and coagulation cascades. We hypothesized that DXS ...
Ashton-Chess Joanna - - 2003
Delayed xenograft rejection (DXR) of pig organs by baboons currently represents the major obstacle to successful xenotransplantation. Although antibodies (Abs) are believed to play a fundamental role in this form of rejection, so far little is known concerning the potential cellular component. Biopsies taken during DXR of human CD55 transgenic ...
Kosco-Vilbois Marie H - - 2003
Follicular dendritic cells (FDCs), which reside in the primary B-cell follicles and germinal centres of lymphoid tissues, can sequester antigen in the form of immune complexes and are thought to be pivotal to the germinal-centre reaction and the maintenance of immunological memory. But, many recent studies question the importance of ...
Rainard Pascal - - 2003
The mammary gland of dairy cows, which is prone to infection by various bacteria, mobilizes local and systemic immune defenses to cope with pathogens. The complement system plays an important part in the innate immunity against microorganisms through its bactericidal, opsonic, and phlogistic functions. The amount of the complement in ...
Morgan B Paul - - 2003
Complement (C) performs vital roles in immune surveillance, from killing of bacteria to generation of an optimal antibody response. However, the mediators responsible for this protective role can inappropriately target self tissues and cause pathology in many inflammatory diseases, in ischaemia-reperfusion injuries and also as a result of therapeutic intervention, ...
Blanchin Stephanie - - 2003
Biosynthesis of thyroid hormones is an oxidative process that generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) and involves thyroperoxidase (TPO) that is one of the main autoantigens involved in autoimmune thyroid diseases. The ectodomain of TPO consists of a large N-terminal myeloperoxidase-like module followed by a complement control protein (CCP)-like module and ...
Rossbacher Joerg - - 2003
B cells express complement receptors (CRs) that bind activated fragments of C3 and C4. Immunized CR knockout (KO) mice have lower antibody titers and smaller germinal centers (GCs), demonstrating the importance of CR signals for the humoral immune response. CR ligands were thought to be generated via complement fixation mediated ...
Sacks Steven H - - 2003
The role of innate immunity in allograft injury is just beginning to become clear, and complement is probably one of a number of factors that are activated very early in the course of transplantation. Kidney transplantation into complement-inhibited rats reduces subsequent inflammation of the graft, probably as a result of ...
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