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Hess Philip J PJ - - 2005
PURPOSE: Several aspects of the systemic inflammatory response to coronary artery bypass graft surgery are described. SUMMARY: The inflammatory response is a fundamental biological protective mechanism that gathers together the body's cellular and chemical defense mechanisms at the local site of tissue injury. The systemic inflammatory response syndrome refers to ...
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Shushakova Nelli - - 2005
Immune complex (IC) deposition induces an acute inflammatory response with tissue injury. IC-induced inflammation is mediated by inflammatory cell infiltration, a process highly regulated by the cell surface-specific receptor (uPAR), a binding partner for the urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA). We assessed the role of the uPA/uPAR system in IC-induced inflammation ...
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Edelson Brian T - - 2006
Mast cells play a critical role in innate immunity, allergy, and autoimmune diseases. The receptor/ligand interactions that mediate mast cell activation are poorly defined. The alpha2beta1 integrin, a receptor for collagens, laminins, decorin, E-cadherin, matrix metalloproteinase-1 (MMP-1), endorepellin, and several viruses, has been implicated in normal developmental, inflammatory, and oncogenic ...
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Karp David R - - 2005
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: It is well recognized that the complement system plays multiple roles in systemic lupus erythematosus. Activation of the classical pathway by immune complexes leads to the generation of inflammatory mediators, thus promoting tissue injury. Complement activation also plays an important role in the maintenance of tolerance to ...
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Grehan John F - - 2005
Vascular endothelial cells (EC) perform critical functions that require a balance of cell survival and cell death. EC death by apoptosis and EC activation and injury by the membrane attack complex of complement are important mechanisms in atherosclerosis and organ graft rejection. Although the effects of various cytokines on EC ...
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Davenport Robertson D - - 2005
Hemolytic transfusion reactions (HTR) are systemic reactions provoked by immunologic red blood cell (RBC) incompatibility. Clinical and experimental observations of such reactions indicate that they proceed through phases of humoral immune reaction, activation of phagocytes, productions of cytokine mediators, and wide-ranging cellular responses. HTR have many features in common with ...
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Mizuno Masashi - - 2005
Complement is part of the innate immune system, acting to protect the host from microorganisms such as bacteria, and other foreign and abnormal cells. Although primarily protective, complement activation can also cause damage to the host. In a number of inflammatory diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis and dermatitis, there is excessive ...
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Sontheimer Richard D - - 2005
The complement cascade is a multi-faced effector component of the innate immune response. C1q is the recognition component of the classical pathway of complement activation. In addition, C1q has been recognized to serve a number of other biological functions including a modulating role on cellular functions within the adaptive immune ...
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Sturfelt G - - 2005
The complement system has important protective functions in both the innate and the adaptive immune systems but can also, when inappropriately activated, cause tissue damage. Complement deficiency predisposes to infection and also to development of autoimmune disease, especially SLE, and complement is at the same time involved in the pathogenesis ...
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Mathsson Linda - - 2005
Monoclonal antibodies produced by patients with lymphoproliferative diseases sometimes appear as cryoglobulins (CG), immunoglobulins (Ig) that reversibly agglutinate and form immune complexes (IC) when cooled below normal body temperature or through variation in pH and ionic strength. In accordance with our findings of IC-induced cytokine production from peripheral blood mononuclear ...
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He Chun - - 2005
In glomerular diseases of diverse etiologies, dysfunction of the glomerular barrier to protein passage results in proteinuria, and proteinuria is considered an independent risk factor that plays a direct role in inflammation, interstitial fibrosis, and renal failure. The mechanism by which proteinuria leads to nephrotoxic injury is unclear, but a ...
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Greenberg Steven A - - 2005
Dermatomyositis has been modeled as an autoimmune disease largely mediated by the adaptive immune system, including a local humorally mediated response with B and T helper cell muscle infiltration, antibody and complement-mediated injury of capillaries, and perifascicular atrophy of muscle fibers caused by ischemia. To further understand the pathophysiology of ...
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Turnberg Daniel - - 2005
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The last few years have seen a huge increase in our understanding of the role of the complement system and its regulation in glomerular disease. Our aim is to summarize the most important advances in this field. RECENT FINDINGS: The role of complement in systemic lupus erythematosus ...
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Hawlisch Heiko - - 2005
The complement system and the Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are two central arms of innate immunity that are critical to host defense as well as the development of adaptive immunity. Most pathogens activate both complement and TLRs, suggesting the potential for crosstalk between the two systems. We show here that the ...
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Craig Maria L - - 2005
Severe anemia is a lethal complication of Plasmodium falciparum malaria, particularly in children. Recent studies in children with severe P. falciparum anemia have demonstrated elevated levels of E-bound Abs, reduced E-associated complement receptor 1 (CR1) and decay-accelerating factor (DAF), and pronounced splenic enlargement, suggesting a mechanism for E loss involving ...
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Skokowa Julia - - 2005
Complement and FcgammaR effector pathways are central triggers of immune inflammation; however, the exact mechanisms for their cooperation with effector cells and their nature remain elusive. In this study we show that in the lung Arthus reaction, the initial contact between immune complexes and alveolar macrophages (AM) results in plasma ...
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Twining Carin M - - 2005
The present series of experiments examined whether the complement cascade might play a key role in the expression of mechanical allodynia. Soluble complement receptor 1 (sCR1) was used to block the activation of the membrane attack pathway of the complement cascade. In doing so, sCR1 prevents the formation of the ...
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Liu Jianuo - - 2005
Decay-accelerating factor ([DAF] CD55) is a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored membrane inhibitor of complement with broad clinical relevance. Here, we establish an additional and unexpected role for DAF in the suppression of adaptive immune responses in vivo. In both C57BL/6 and BALB/c mice, deficiency of the Daf1 gene, which encodes the murine homologue ...
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Mastellos D - - 2005
Complement has been long perceived as an innate immune system that plays a pivotal role in the maintenance of host defense against infectious agents and the propagation of pro-inflammatory responses in the context of human disease. Complement activation has been associated with the onset of acute inflammatory reactions leading to ...
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Low J M - - 2005
The production of autoreactive antibodies from self-reactive B cells results in the formation of immune complexes that deposit in tissue and fix complement, contributing to the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Earlier mouse models emphasize the importance of autoreactive antibodies formed against "self" proteins that serve as a source for ...
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Lange Sigrun - - 2005
The complement system is important both in the innate and adaptive immune response, with C3 as the central protein of all three activation pathways. Apolipoprotein A-I (ApoLP A-I), a high-density lipoprotein (HDL), has been shown to have a regulatory role in the complement system by inhibiting the formation of the ...
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Rus Horea - - 2005
Complement is a major component of innate immune system involved in defending against all the foreign pathogens through complement fragments that participate in opsonization, chemotaxis, and activation of leukocytes and through cytolysis by C5b-9 membrane attack complex. Bacterias and viruses have adapted in various ways to escape the complement activation, ...
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Rus Horea - - 2005
Complement system activation plays an important role in innate and acquired immunity. Activation of complement leads to the formation of C5b-9 terminal complex. While C5b-9 can promote cell lysis, sublytic assembly of C5b-9 on plasma membranes induces cell cycle activation and survival. Multiple sclerosis (MS) and its animal model experimental ...
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Allegretti M - - 2005
Activation of complement via the innate and adaptive immune system is vital to the body's defences in fighting infections. Unregulated complement activation is likely to play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of several diseases including psoriasis, adult (acute) respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), bullous pemphigoid (BP), rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and ...
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Rieben Robert - - 2005
Acute vascular rejection represents a formidable barrier to clinical xenotransplantation and it is known that this type of rejection can also be initiated by xenoreactive antibodies that have limited complement-activating ability. Using a sophisticated mouse model, a recent study has provided in vivo evidence for the existence of an IgG(1)-mediated ...
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Quartier Pierre - - 2005
Soluble molecules including complement components have been shown to facilitate the clearance of dying cells by phagocytes, a process that is important in preventing tissue damage and autoimmunity. However, the extent to which complement is involved in this process and the relative contribution of each of the complement activation pathways ...
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Molina Hector - - 2005
Complement has an important role in innate immunity and inflammation. Complement also has the capacity to attack self tissues. Cells are protected from the deleterious effects of complement. The Crry protein belongs to a family of molecules that regulates complement activation, protecting tissues from complement-mediated damage. To investigate the role ...
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Fosbrink Matthew - - 2005
Activation of the complement system plays an important role in innate and acquired immunity. Activation of complement and subsequent formation of C5b-9 channels on the surface of cellular membranes leads to cell lysis. When the number of channels assembled on the surface of nucleated cells is limited, C5b-9 does not ...
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Burova L A - - 2005
Acute rheumatic fever (ARF) and acute poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis (APSGN), two important sequelae of streptococcal throat or skin infections, according to current concepts may be elicited by autoimmune mechanisms due to molecular mimicry between group A streptococci (GAS) and human tissue. In the case of APSGN, however, our experimental data have ...
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Kemper Claudia - - 2005
Crosslinking of CD46 and CD3 on naïve human CD4+ T-lymphocytes induces interleukin-10 secretion and granzyme B expression. These highly proliferative T-regulatory type 1-like T-regulatory T-cells (Tregs) can suppress an immune response. We propose that this process is important in the prevention of chronic inflammation such as at epithelial borders and ...
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Yazdanbakhsh K - - 2005
The complement system plays a crucial role in fighting infections and is an important link between the innate and adaptive immune responses. However, inappropriate complement activation can cause tissue damage, and it underlies the pathology of many diseases. In the transfusion medicine setting, complement sensitization of RBCs can lead to ...
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Guo Ren-Feng - - 2005
The complement system not only represents an effective innate immune mechanism of host defense to eradicate microbial pathogens, but it is also widely involved in many forms of acute and chronic inflammatory diseases including sepsis, acute lung injury, ischemia-reperfusion injury, and asthma, to give just a few examples. The complement-activated ...
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Nawrocka-Kunecka Agnieszka - - 2005
Neuronal loss in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) is due to apoptosis and autophagy, however the apoptotic cell death may be related to the influence of cytokines. The role of complement system in induction of this process was recently postulated. In our study we examined the immunoreactivity for "early activation" complement factors ...
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Morgan B Paul - - 2005
The complement system, a pillar of innate immunity, has belatedly become recognised as a key modulator of adaptive immunity, acting to direct, modulate and modify the responses of lymphocytes to stimuli. These effects are mediated by interactions between complement components or activation-derived fragments and specific binding proteins--complement receptors and regulators--on ...
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Castellheim Albert - - 2005
Meconium aspiration syndrome is a serious condition of the newborn characterized by pulmonary inflammation with substantial neutrophil infiltration. We recently showed that meconium is a potent activator of complement. The aim of the present study was to investigate a possible role for complement in meconium-induced neutrophil activation. Meconium was incubated ...
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Kulkarni Amod P - - 2004
Several neurodegenerative disorders, such as multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's disease, and Parkinson's disease, are associated with inflammatory damage. The complex process of neuroinflammation involves various components of the immune system and the central nervous system. Particularly, brain astrocytes and microglial cells generate several inflammatory mediators like cytokines, leukotrienes, superoxide radicals, eicasonoids, ...
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Glovsky M Michael - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: To define techniques used for complement measurements and examine the clinical relevance of alterations of complement determinations in disease. DATA SOURCES: Data have been assembled from the authors' research, original articles, and reviews, as well as chapters and complete books on complement. STUDY SELECTION: Studies were chosen for inclusion ...
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Anderson Aileen J - - 2004
Previous studies have shown that a cellular inflammatory response is initiated, and inflammatory cytokines are synthesized, following experimental spinal cord injury (SCI). In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that the complement cascade, a major component of both the innate and adaptive immune response, is also activated following experimental ...
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Koller Hendrik - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Haemodialysis (HD) with bioincompatible cellulosic membranes like Cuprophan (CU) is considered to influence negatively the clinical outcome of acute and chronic renal failure. In this effect, apart from the disturbance of phagocytosis or oxygen species production by leukocytes, increased apoptosis also has been implicated recently. The objective of this ...
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Vandermeer Joseph - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: To study the expression of important elements of the innate immune responses in human sinonasal tissue to elucidate its potential role in mucosal inflammation. DESIGN: We studied human sinonasal tissue from patients with chronic rhinosinusitis and an immortalized epithelial cell line to detect the expression of innate immune effectors ...
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Jiang H - - 2004
Recombinant adenoviruses are one of the most common gene transfer vectors utilized in human clinical trials, but it is also clear that systemic administration of this virus will be met by host innate and adaptive antiviral immune responses. One element of innate immunity is the complement system, a group of ...
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Bandyopadhyay Sumi - - 2004
BACKGROUND: An enhanced presence of 9-O-acetylated sialoglycoconjugates (9-O-AcSGs) triggers the alternate pathway (AP) in Indian visceral leishmaniasis (VL). Antibodies directed against these epitopes are present in high titers. The biological relevance of these antibodies, with regard to activation of the classical pathway (CP), was investigated. METHODS: Complement activators were affinity ...
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Sewell Diane L - - 2004
The role of complement components in traumatic brain injury is poorly understood. Here we show that secondary damage after acute cryoinjury is significantly reduced in C3-/- or C5-/- mice or in mice treated with C5a receptor antagonist peptides. Injury sizes and neutrophil extravasation were compared. While neutrophil density increased following ...
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Edwards Jennifer L - - 2004
The molecular mechanisms used by the gonococcus to initiate infection exhibit gender specificity. The clinical presentations of disease are also strikingly different upon comparison of gonococcal urethritis to gonococcal cervicitis. An intimate association occurs between the gonococcus and the urethral epithelium and is mediated by the asialoglycoprotein receptor. Gonococcal interaction ...
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Mabbott Neil A - - 2004
The complement system is an essential component of the innate immune system that aids the recognition and destruction of pathogens. Despite the potent cytolytic activity of this system, some pathogens have turned interactions with complement to their advantage. Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), or prion diseases, also seem to use the ...
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Carroll Michael C - - 2004
The serum complement system, which represents a chief component of innate immunity, not only participates in inflammation but also acts to enhance the adaptive immune response. Specific activation of complement via innate recognition proteins or secreted antibody releases cleavage products that interact with a wide range of cell surface receptors ...
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Carroll Michael C - - 2004
Clinical and genetic studies in humans and animal models indicate a crucial protective role for the complement system in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). This presents a paradox because the complement system is considered to be an important mediator of the inflammation that is observed in patients with SLE. One current ...
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Sotelo Julio - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Interstitial immunotherapy consists of the local injection of immune cells or molecules with cytotoxic properties to destroy neoplastic cells. Intratumor injection of quinacrine induces intense recruitment of activated immune cells that leads to necrosis and elimination of experimental malignant neoplasms; this effect seems to be mediated by immune molecules. ...
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Albrecht Eric A - - 2004
The complement system is an integral part of innate immunity and is chiefly responsible for controlling bacterial infections, especially those involving gram- negative organisms. To accomplish this task, serum proteins engage in a series of enzymatic cascades. The cleaved proteins assemble pores on membranous structures, which lead to cell lysis. ...
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Godau Jeanne - - 2004
Immune complex (IC)-induced inflammation is integral to the pathogenesis of several autoimmune diseases. ICs activate the complement system and interact with IgG FcgammaR. In this study, we demonstrate that activation of the complement system, specifically generation of C5a, initiates the neutrophilic inflammation in IC peritonitis. We show that ablation of ...
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