Search Results
Results 451 - 500 of 1183
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Pease James E - - 2006
Since the identification of the first chemotactic cytokines 20 years ago, the field has mushroomed, with the discovery of approximately 40 ligands, which interact with 20 different cell surface receptors. At the time of writing this review, a PubMed trawl using the word 'chemokine' will recover over 28,000 manuscripts. In ...
Minami Masabumi - - 2006
Cytokines and chemokines were originally identified as essential mediators for inflammatory and immune responses. Enhanced production and release of cytokines/chemokines are observed also in the central nervous system (CNS) under diverse pathological conditions. There is growing evidence showing that brain cytokines/chemokines play crucial roles in the neuro-glio-vascular interaction underlying the ...
Lane T E - - 2006
Encounters with neurotropic viruses result in varied outcomes ranging from encephalitis, paralytic poliomyelitis or other serious consequences to relatively benign infection. One of the principal factors that control the outcome of infection is the localized tissue response and subsequent immune response directed against the invading toxic agent. It is the ...
Møller Anne-Sophie W - - 2005
Recognition of conserved bacterial structures called pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) by pattern recognition receptors (PRRs), may lead to induction of a variety of "early immediate genes" such as chemokines. In the current study, we have in an ex vivo whole blood model studied the induction of the chemokines MIP-1alpha, MCP-1 ...
Abrahams Vikki M - - 2005
Normal pregnancy is characterized by the presence of innate immune cells at the maternal-fetal interface. Originally, it was postulated that the presence of these leukocytes was due to an immune response toward paternal Ags expressed by the invading trophoblasts. Instead, we and others postulate that these innate immune cells are ...
Medoff Benjamin D - - 2005
Effector T cells significantly contribute to inflammatory diseases. These cells are recruited into tissue, where they orchestrate an inflammatory response that can either protect against infection or sometimes stimulate human disease. The recruitment of T cells into tissue from the blood and lymphoid compartments is an active process controlled by ...
Wang Jianhua - - 2005
The establishment of metastatic bone lesions in prostate cancer (CaP) is a process partially dependent on angiogenesis. Previously we demonstrated that the stromal-derived factor-1 (SDF-1 or CXCL12)/CXCR4 chemokine axis is critical for CaP cell metastasis. In this investigation, cell lines were established in which CXCR4 expression was knocked down using ...
Erin E M - - 2005
BACKGROUND: Cytokines and chemokines produced by allergen-reactive T-helper type 2 (Th2) cells may be pivotal to the pathophysiology of allergic disorders. OBJECTIVE: This study was performed to assess the effect of 7 days of topical corticosteroid on nasal allergen challenge (NAC) in terms of eosinophils, cytokines and chemokines obtained by ...
Luster Andrew D - - 2005
The burgeoning field of leukocyte trafficking has created new and exciting opportunities in the clinic. Trafficking signals are being defined that finely control the movement of distinct subsets of immune cells into and out of specific tissues. Because the accumulation of leukocytes in tissues contributes to a wide variety of ...
Wells Timothy N C - - 2006
Chemokines are a family of small chemoattractant cytokines that have an important role in controlling leukocyte migration. The finding that some chemokines and their receptors are upregulated in both acute and chronic inflammatory diseases, and that they are key players in the development of AIDS, has provided the pharmaceutical industry ...
Stalder, Mark Winston
Increased expression of cytokines and chemokines in the central nervous system (CNS) is closely associated with the development of retroviral-induced neurological diseases such as HIV-associated dementia, as well as other neuropathologies such as Alzheimers Disease and Multiple Sclerosis. The specific functions of many of these pro-inflammatory factors have yet to ...
Smith Philip - - 2005
The coevolution of humans and infectious agents has exerted selective pressure on the immune system to control potentially lethal infections. Correspondingly, pathogens have evolved with various strategies to modulate and circumvent the host's innate and adaptive immune response. Schistosoma species are helminth parasites with genes that have been selected to ...
Tidball James G - - 2005
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This review provides an updated evaluation of the role of inflammation in muscular dystrophy, and presents findings which suggest that non-immunological factors promote idiopathic inflammatory myopathies. Recent findings are summarized which indicate that immune-targeted interventions may provide useful approaches to treat muscular dystrophy. RECENT FINDINGS: Elevated expression ...
Vergunst C E - - 2005
The directed movement of immune cells is highly dependent on the chemokine network. Chemokines are key molecules early in the embryogenesis of lymph nodes and throughout adult life, where they regulate immune responses against pathogens. Although immune cells are best known for expressing chemokine receptors, through which they can respond ...
Sozzani Silvano - - 2005
Experimental evidence has shown that the chemokine system is redox-regulated, but little is known about the molecular mechanisms involved. IL-8/CXCL8 is a neutrophil chemotactic protein that characterizes the inflammatory reaction in many pathological conditions. Accordingly, pro-inflammatory agonists and oxygen radicals induce IL-8. In the current issue of the European Journal ...
Takahashi Noboru - - 2006
Double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) and the viral RNA mimic, polyinosine-polycytidylic acid (poly(I:C)), are recognized by toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3) that mediates the innate immune response to viral infections. In this study, we investigated the effects of poly(I:C) on the production of chemokines (IL-8, RANTES, and eotaxin), Type I IFNs (IFNalpha and ...
Pantsulaia I - - 2005
Monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) is a chemokine whose circulating levels have been detected in the lesions of several diseases such as pulmonary fibrosis, rheumatoid arthritis and atherosclerosis. However, the factors involved in the regulation of its production remain largely unknown. The main aim of the present paper was to ascertain ...
Rittner H L - - 2005
When tissue is destroyed or invaded by leukocytes in inflammation, numerous mediators are delivered by the circulation and/or liberated from resident and immigrated cells at the site. Proalgesic mediators include proinflammatory cytokines, chemokines, protons, nerve growth factor, and prostaglandins, which are produced by invading leukocytes or by resident cells. Less ...
Cripps James G - - 2005
Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) located on cellular membranes and the extracellular matrix (ECM) are able to interact with chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines, leading to local cytokine/chemokine accumulation. The tissue-bound cytokines/chemokines function in promoting leukocyte migration and activation, contributing to local inflammation. Hence, targeting of GAG-cytokine interactions may provide an avenue for the ...
Esche Clemens - - 2005
Healthy individuals initiate an immediate immune response to microbes by using a set of germline-encoded receptors that recognize common molecular patterns found on the surface of pathogens that are distinct from self-antigens. This innate immune response is the first line of defense against microorganisms in vertebrates, and constitutes the only ...
Calonge Margarita - - 2005
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The epithelium of target organs is playing an increasing role in allergy. Several studies have shown that epithelial cells participate actively in inflammatory processes. This review will focus on recent advances in the role of conjunctival epithelium in allergy as a potential target for therapeutic interventions. RECENT ...
Nour May - - 2005
Chemokines act as leukocyte chemoattractants with fine specificity for individual leukocyte types. Chemokine activation in infectious and inflammatory conditions of the cornea has been well described and is thought to result from rapid activation of intracellular signaling cascades within corneal cells. Keratocytes, the resident cells of the corneal stroma, capably ...
Belo A V - - 2005
OBJECTIVES: A wide range of compounds inhibit formation of new blood vessels in a variety of models, accompanied by decreases in pro-angiogenic cytokines. The authors sought a surrogate marker for the complex process of neovascularization by correlating inhibition of cytokine production with anti-angiogenic effect. METHODS: Three anti-angiogenic compounds, clotrimazole (120 ...
Vergunst Clarissa E - - 2005
Chemokines are small proteins that can act on cells that express matching receptors. They are best known for their role in migration of cells, especially immune cells. Chemokine/chemokine-receptor pairs are often functionally categorized into three groups: inflammatory, homeostatic, and angiogenic/angiostatic, although functions sometimes overlap. Interfering with the interaction between chemokines ...
Trakatelli C - - 2005
Chemokines are a group of small secreted proteins (8-10 kDa) produced and released by a wide variety of cell types. They were originally described as mediators of leukocyte recruitment, which is essential in acute and chronic inflammation. They also play a critical role in many pathophysiological processes such as allergic ...
Vianello Fabrizio - - 2005
Chemotaxis or active movement of leukocytes toward a stimulus has been shown to occur in response to chemokinetic agents including members of the recently identified superfamily of proteins called chemokines. Leukocyte chemotaxis is thought to play a central role in a wide range of physiological and pathological processes including the ...
Takanohashi Asako - - 2005
Many studies have shown that pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF) has neurotrophic effects on retinal cells and hippocampal, spinal cord, and cerebellar granule cell neurons, but much less work has examined the effects of PEDF on glia. In this study, we show that PEDF changes microglial morphology within 1 h of ...
Schoggins John W - - 2005
The major adenovirus (Ad) capsid proteins hexon, penton, and fiber influence the efficiency and tropism of gene transduction by Ad vectors. Fiber is the high-affinity receptor binding protein that serves to mediate cell attachment in vitro when using coxsackie-adenovirus receptor (CAR)-containing cell lines. This contrasts with transduction efficiency in macrophages ...
Hogaboam Cory M - - 2005
Targeting chemokines and chemokine receptors in various acute and chronic pulmonary diseases remains a vibrant area of basic and clinical research despite major hurdles including cross-species barriers, toxicity, and redundancy. In this review, we draw upon our basic research with a murine model in which innate and acquired immunity are ...
Schroff Robert W - - 2005
The dividing line between essential physiological inflammatory processes and excessive pathological inflammation is often very thin - in some circumstances, indeed, it may be non-existent. Devising anti-inflammatory medications that effectively target only the pathological component therefore remains a central challenge for the pharmaceutical industry. At present, the general rule is ...
Stein Jens V - - 2005
Chemokines are a large family of small, generally secreted polypeptides which guide lymphocyte movement throughout the body by controlling integrin avidity and inducing migration. Here, we look at recent, exciting findings on chemokine function throughout lymphocyte development and co-ordinated T and B cell migration during immune responses. Finally, we will ...
Klein Robyn S - - 2005
The activation and entry of antigen-specific CD8(+) T cells into the central nervous system is an essential step towards clearance of West Nile virus (WNV) from infected neurons. The molecular signals responsible for the directed migration of virus-specific T cells and their cellular sources are presently unknown. Here we demonstrate ...
Buttmann Mathias - - 2005
Subcutaneous Interferon-beta (IFN-beta) injections for the treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS) frequently cause inflammatory injection site reactions. To study the role of chemokines we obtained skin biopsies from 7 MS patients 24 h after injection. At the IFN-beta but not at the contralateral placebo injection sites, we observed strong IP-10/CXCL10 ...
Boomker Jasper M - - 2005
The foreign body response is characterized by enhanced recruitment of inflammatory cells. As the directional movement of cells is controlled by chemokines, disruption of the chemokine network would be an attractive approach to improve biocompatibility of an implanted material. The sequestration of chemokines by cell surface-expressed glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) is vital ...
Ji Li-Li - - 2005
Andrographis paniculata is a traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) that has been effectively used for treatment of infection, inflammation, cold, fever, and diarrhea in China. However, mechanism of its therapeutic function is not well known. In the current study, we showed one of its components, andrograpanin, could enhance chemokine stromal cell-derived ...
Gouwy Mieke - - 2005
The inflammatory response is a highly co-ordinated process involving multiple factors acting in a complex network as stimulators or inhibitors. Upon infection, the sequential release of exogenous agents (e.g. bacterial and viral products) and induction of endogenous mediators (e.g. cytokines and chemokines) contribute to the recruitment of circulating leukocytes to ...
Tokuyama Hirotake - - 2005
Chemokine receptors CCR2, CCR5 and CXCR3 are involved in the regulation of macrophage- and T cell-mediated immune responses and in the migration and activation of these cells. In order to determine whether blockade of these chemokine receptors modulates intestinal inflammation, we investigated here the effect of a non-peptide chemokine receptor ...
Autschbach Frank - - 2005
Chemokines are important mediators involved in the recruitment of leucocytes to lymphoid tissues and to sites of inflammation. To identify suitable monoclonal antibodies for immunohistochemistry, we tested a panel of new reagents provided by the cytokine/chemokine receptor section of the 8th HLDA workshop on cryostat sections of normal human gut, ...
Loria Maria Paola - - 2005
Chemokines and cytokines are involved in many processes, both physiological and pathological, particularly the recruitment, differentiation, activation, and proliferation of immune cells taking part in ontogenesis, inflammation, and cancer. It was assumed that chemokines and cytokines receptors are expressed in a regulated manner by human lymphocytes during ontogeny and later ...
Nureki Shin-ichi - - 2005
We examined the production of macrophage-derived chemokine (MDC/CCL22) and thymus- and activation-regulated chemokine (TARC/CCL17) by bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) cells in cigarette-smoke-associated acute eosinophilic pneumonia (CS-AEP). The CC Chemokine Receptor 4 (CCR4) ligand levels in BALF from patients with CS-AEP were considerably higher than those in healthy volunteers and correlated ...
Peatman Eric - - 2005
Chemokines, a superfamily of chemotactic cytokines involved in recruitment, activation, and adhesion of a variety of leukocyte types to inflammatory foci, are a crucial component of the immune system of Sarcopterygiian vertebrates. Although all mammalian chemokines are believed to have been found, the status of these molecules in Actinopterygii was ...
Kastenbauer Stefan - - 2005
Seventy-nine cytokines, chemokines, and growth factors were measured by protein array analysis in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients with meningitis and controls. Several factors were found to be regulated, which have not been studied in the CNS before, e.g., macrophage inflammatory protein-1delta (CCL15) and neutrophil-activating peptide-2 (CXCL7). In pneumococcal meningitis, ...
Bendall L - - 2005
Chemokines are a family of structurally related low molecular weight (8-10 kDa) proteins that are important for the organization of tissues during development and regulate cell motility and localization both during development and in the adult. In the adult, this function is predominantly related to the trafficking of leukocytes, although ...
Wenzel Joerg - - 2005
We studied 253 primary melanomas of the skin for histologic signs of regression. Detailed immunohistologic analyses, including expression of MxA (an antiviral protein specifically induced by type I interferons), the chemokine IP10/CXCL10, the chemokine receptor CXCR3, and the cytotoxic molecule granzyme B, were performed for 14 typical regressive tumors and ...
Glabinski Andrzej - - 2005
Chemokines are small chemotactic cytokines involved in numerous biologic and pathologic processes. They are important mediators of leukocyte trafficking, development of inflammation, tumor metastasis and immune cell differentiation. Inflammation in the CNS develops in a unique manner that is partially due to the existence of the blood-brain barrier. All inflammatory ...
Giavedoni Luis D - - 2005
Cytokines and chemokines are soluble mediators of the immune system that play a crucial role in intercellular signaling, and in the recruitment of cells to inflammation sites. Identification of these molecules in nonhuman primates (NHP) is crucial for the understanding of complex physiological and pathological mechanisms that occur in these ...
Lügering Andreas - - 2005
The chemokine Mip3alpha is specifically expressed by the follicle-associated epithelia (FAE) covering intestinal Peyer's patches (PPs) and is the only known chemokine ligand for the chemokine receptor CCR6. Although CCR6-deficient mice are known to have a perturbed intestinal immune system, little is known about the specific impact of this interaction ...
Shahrara Shiva - - 2005
CC chemokines and their receptors play a fundamental role in trafficking and activation of leukocytes at sites of inflammation, contributing to joint damage in rheumatoid arthritis. Met-RANTES, an amino-terminal-modified methionylated form of RANTES (CCL5), antagonizes the binding of the chemokines RANTES and macrophage inflammatory protein 1alpha (MIP-1alpha; CCL3) to their ...
Kashizuka Hisanori - - 2005
BACKGROUND: Inducible costimulator (ICOS) is the third member of the CD28 superfamily and has a unique role in T cell activation and function. Recent studies indicated that the ICOS-B7h pathway plays an important role in alloimmune responses. We further investigated the role of the ICOS pathway in the pathologic process ...
Barcelos L S - - 2005
The majority of biological responses classically attributed to tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) is mediated by p55 receptor (TNFR1). Here, we aimed to clarify the biological role of TNFR1-mediated signals in an in vivo inflammatory angiogenesis model. Polyester-polyurethane sponges, used as a framework for tissue growth, were implanted in C57Bl/6 ...
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