| Results 451 - 500 of 1159 | ||
| < 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 > | ||
|
Stock Philippe - - 2006
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Allergic diseases are caused by the overdevelopment of T-helper type 2 biased immune responses in susceptible individuals. A number of recent studies indicate that regulatory T cells play an important role in controlling such T-helper type 2 biased responses not only in animal models, but in humans ...
|
||
|
Renz Harald - - 2006
The dramatic increase of allergic disorders in the last decades made their study an imperious demand. The increasing incidence of the development of allergic disorders seems to be associated with the modern westernized lifestyle, but causal reasons and the underlying mechanisms are far from being completely understood. Evidences suggest that ...
|
||
|
Schmid-Grendelmeier Peter - - 2006
Atopic eczema (AE) is a chronic relapsing, highly pruritic inflammation of the skin with a worldwide prevalence of 10-20% in children and of 1-3% in adults. Malassezia sympodialis has been reported as the most frequent skin-colonizing yeast in both AE patients and healthy individuals. Approximately 50% of the AE patients ...
|
||
|
Woodfolk J A - - 2006
Production of IgE antibodies promotes the development of allergic disorders such as asthma, rhinitis and atopic eczema. Though Th2 cytokines play a pivotal role in the allergic inflammatory cascade, therapeutic strategies which target these factors have not been curative in clinical trials. In humans, the allergic phenotype encompasses a broad ...
|
||
|
Romagnani S - - 2006
Several recent data suggest the importance of different types of cells in the regulation of T-cell effector-mediated immune responses. However, a unique specific marker for these cells has not yet been identified. Moreover, in addition to a dedicated functional lineage, even a 'plastic' phenotype of regulatory T cells seems to ...
|
||
|
Shin Tae-Yong - - 2006
The immediate-type allergic reaction is involved in many allergic diseases such as asthma and allergic rhinitis. The discovery of drugs for the treatment of immediate-type allergic diseases is a very important subject in human health. In this study, we investigated the effect of Artemisia iwayomogi (AIAE) on mast cell-mediated allergic ...
|
||
|
Donnelly Sheila - - 2006
Proteolytic activity is a central biochemical property that endows molecules with intrinsic allergenicity. Thus, the cysteine protease of dust mite, Der p1, the aspartic protease of cockroach, Bla g 2, the serine protease of Aspergillus fumigatus and the bacterial subtilisins are all major allergenic molecules responsible for the increase in ...
|
||
|
Williams Marc - - 2006
Allergic diseases are due to hypersensitive immune responses against otherwise innocuous allergens, and involve the dysregulated expression of numerous genes in cells from both the innate and adaptive immune systems. Allergic diseases are characterized by the enhanced production of type 2 T helper (Th2) cytokines, including interleukin-4, -5 and -13. ...
|
||
|
Negrao-Correa Deborah - - 2006
Several studies have now shown that the prevalence of helminth infections is negatively correlated with the prevalence and/or severity of allergic diseases. Here, we describe studies in rodents infected with Strongyloides venezuelensis examining the mutual influence of nematode infection and allergy. S. venezuelensis has a lung cycle, much akin to ...
|
||
|
Wilson Mark S - - 2006
The inverse relationship between helminth infection and overt allergic reactivity has intrigued medical scientists for three decades. In the past 5 years, detailed epidemiological studies coupled with new experimental model approaches, have substantiated the negative effects of infection on allergic disease manifestation, and begun to provide mechanistic explanations for this ...
|
||
|
Martin James G - - 2006
Immunotherapy was formerly the treatment of allergic disease by repeated exposure to allergen. Other approaches to immune modulation have emerged using new knowledge of T cell function. The so-called hygiene hypothesis argues that alterations in our environment have resulted in a failure of the immune system to develop normally, such ...
|
||
|
Schmidt M - - 2006
BACKGROUND: Immunostimulatory oligodeoxynucleotides (CpG-ODN) usually contain phosphorothioate (PS) backbones for nucleotide protection, which may result in some nonspecific side-effects like prolongation of coagulation time. OBJECTIVE: The aim of the present study was to investigate the immunomodulatory potential of DNA molecules without PS backbones. Thus, we designed phosphorodiester (PO) molecules with ...
|
||
|
Akdis Mübeccel - - 2006
Activation-induced cell death, anergy and/or immune response modulation by T regulatory cells (T(Reg)) are essential mechanisms of peripheral T-cell tolerance. There is growing evidence that anergy, tolerance and active suppression are not entirely distinct, but rather, represent linked mechanisms possibly involving the same cells and multiple suppressor mechanisms. Skewing of ...
|
||
|
Katz Howard R - - 2006
The immune system must effectively regulate the balance between beneficial and detrimental inflammation. This process is achieved in part through cell surface receptors that rapidly integrate activating and inhibitory signals. The inhibitory members of the leukocyte Ig-like receptor (LILR) family, termed LILRBs, are broadly distributed among cell populations in the ...
|
||
|
Jayapal Manikandan - - 2006
BACKGROUND: Mast cells are well established effectors of IgE-triggered allergic reactions and immune responses to parasitic infections. Recent studies indicate that mast cells may play roles in adaptive and innate immunity, suggesting an innovative view of the regulation of immune responses. Here, we profiled the transcriptome of human mast cells ...
|
||
|
Zhang-Hoover Jie - - 2005
Allergic asthma is mediated in part by unregulated Th2 inflammation in response to an allergen. Induction of peripheral tolerance by inoculation of Ags into the anterior chamber of the eye (ocular tolerance) before sensitization blocks Th2 responses. Thus, we proposed that induction of ocular tolerance to the allergen might modulate ...
|
||
|
Williams Patricia B - - 2005
Conjunctival and corneal manifestations of atopic keratoconjunctivitis (AKC) are chronic, disabling and may be blinding. In common with other allergic diseases, such as asthma and atopic dermatitis, AKC is characterised by an allergen-induced immune response mediated through expression of IgE. The humanised monoclonal IgE antibody Xolair (omalizumab) complexes with free ...
|
||
|
Ahern David J - - 2005
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Reduced activity of regulatory T cells has recently been described in several diseases, including allergy. This concept of an alteration in the balance between the suppression and activation of harmful T helper type 2 immunity in allergy has important potential implications for strategies to prevent and control ...
|
||
|
Kulka Marianna - - 2006
Mast cells, which are associated with T helper cell type 2-dependent inflammation, have now been implicated in the innate immune response. To further characterize how mast cells are programmed to respond to infectious organisms, we used expression profiling using DNA microarray analysis of gene expression by human mast cells (huMC) ...
|
||
|
Sudowe Stephan - - 2006
BACKGROUND: Allergen gene transfer represents an alternative approach to specific immunotherapy with allergen extracts. Gene gun-mediated DNA immunization with plasmid vectors expressing a transgene under control of the promoter of the fascin gene (pFascin) allows for antigen production predominantly by dendritic cells and resulted in the generation of CD8(+) cytotoxic ...
|
||
|
Dearman Rebecca J - - 2005
There is considerable interest in the development and evaluation of approaches for the safety assessment of novel foods, and in particular in methods for characterisation of allergenic potential. One strategy that has found favour is a tiered approach in which the potential of novel proteins to induce allergic sensitisation is ...
|
||
|
Ciprandi Giorgio - - 2005
Allergic rhinitis (AR) is a high-prevalence disease, affecting 10-15% of the general population. AR is sustained by an IgE-mediated reaction, and by a complex inflammatory network of cells, mediators and cytokines that becomes chronic when exposure to allergen persists. A T helper 2 (TH2)-biased immune response is the basis for ...
|
||
|
Lin Wen - - 2005
BACKGROUND: Regulatory T cells have been proposed to play an important role in regulating allergic inflammation. The transcription factor Foxp3 is a master switch gene that controls the development and function of natural and adaptive CD4(+)CD25(+) regulatory T (T(R)) cells. In human subjects loss-of-function Foxp3 mutations trigger lymphoproliferation, autoimmunity, and ...
|
||
|
Li Guiming - - 2005
Regulation of MAPK pathways by PKC isoforms was examined in murine bone marrow-derived mast cells (BMMCs). The PKCalpha, betaI, and betaII isoforms showed the most robust activation after FcepsilonR1-mediated stimulation by anti-ovalbumin specific IgE and ovalbumin (IgE-ova). PKCalpha, betaI, and betaII were all involved in activation of JNK, MEKK2, and ...
|
||
|
McDermott Alison M - - 2005
The goal of this symposium was to coalesce information presented by 22 investigators in the field of corneal and ocular surface inflammation into common pathways of inflammation. The perspective elucidated in this article defines the components of the normal ocular surface immune architecture and describes the consensus reached on the ...
|
||
|
Maizels Rick M - - 2005
There is increasing evidence that helminth infections can protect the host against Th2-mediated allergic pathologies, even though helminths themselves are strong Th2 inducers. In murine model systems, alleviation of allergy is not achieved through immune deviation to Th1, but is linked to expansion of regulatory T cell activity. Parasite infection ...
|
||
|
Meng Jianfeng - - 2005
BACKGROUND: A single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) C-509T within the tumor growth factor beta1 (TGFbeta1) gene has been associated with atopic asthma and asthma severity. To further understand the mechanisms involved, the association of C-509T with allergy, T-lymphocyte proliferation and plasma TGFbeta1 concentration has been explored in a case-control study with ...
|
||
|
Takahashi Naomi - - 2005
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is frequently associated with eosinophilia, highly elevated immunoglobulin E (IgE) levels and increased levels of T-helper 2-type (Th2) cytokines in skin lesions due to infiltrating T cells. Interleukin-12 (IL-12), in combination with interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), inhibits IgE synthesis and Th2 cell function. As the IFN-gamma-inducing cytokines IL-12 and ...
|
||
|
Andersson Lundell A-C - - 2005
BACKGROUND: The upper airway mucosa of healthy humans contains a dense network of cells with dendritic morphology of which the majority express a macrophage-like phenotype (CD14+CD64+CD68+), whereas the smaller population are immature dendritic cells (DC; CD11c+CD14-). Our aim was to study the proinflammatory response of human monocytes and in vitro-generated ...
|
||
|
Verhagen Johan - - 2005
A dramatic increase in the prevalence of allergy and asthma has occurred during the past few decades. Although the symptoms of many allergic disorders can be suppressed quite effectively by pharmacological interventions, these do not provide a curative solution and therefore involve lifelong use of medication. Allergen-specific immunotherapy (SIT) on ...
|
||
|
Fontanella G - - 2005
BACKGROUND: Macrophages are mononuclear cells with phagocytic and antigen presenting properties. The role of macrophages in IgE-dependent allergic reactions and oral tolerance remains unclear. In previous works we demonstrated that ovalbumin (OVA)-sensitized rabbits present histopathological modifications of the mucosa in different regions of the digestive tract. The present study analyzes ...
|
||
|
Vliagoftis H - - 2005
Mast cells (MC) are major effector cells of IgE-mediated allergic inflammation. However, it has become increasingly clear that they also play important roles in a diversity of physiological and pathological processes. Recent advances have focused on the importance of MC in both innate and adaptive immune responses and have fostered ...
|
||
|
Gibbons Fiona K - - 2005
Therapy for asthma often includes the combined use of glucocorticoids and leukotriene receptor antagonists. The short-term, combined effects of these drugs on cytokine secretion and lymphocyte proliferation are ill-defined. The aim of this study was to analyze allergen and mitogen-induced cytokine secretion and lymphocyte proliferation in asthmatics and to determine ...
|
||
|
Kimata H - - 2005
We studied the effect of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) on in vitro Japanese cedar pollen (JCP)-specific IgE production by mononuclear cells from atopic keratoconjunctivitis patients with JCP allergy. BDNF enhanced JCP-specific IgE production in a dose-dependent fashion in cultures of mononuclear cells stimulated with JCP, and maximal enhancement was achieved ...
|
||
|
Rosenwasser Lanny J - - 2005
CD23, the low-affinity immunoglobulin (Ig)E receptor (FcepsilonRII), is widely distributed on the surface of various human cells. CD23 mediates numerous IgE-related immune responses (including allergen focusing) by enhancing IgE antigen complex presentation, regulating IgE synthesis, influencing cell differentiation and growth of both B- and T-cells, and stimulating production of pro-inflammatory ...
|
||
|
Prioult Guénolée - - 2005
Allergic hyperreactivity is defined as an exaggerated immune response [typically immunoglobulin E (IgE) but also non-IgE mediated] toward harmless antigenic stimuli. The prevalence of allergic disease has increased dramatically during the last 20 years, especially in developed countries. Both genetic and environmental factors contribute to susceptibility to allergy. Evidence has ...
|
||
|
Mukai Kaori - - 2005
The recruitment of basophils into the sites of allergic inflammation is often observed. However, no definitive evidence has been provided that basophils are crucially involved in the pathogenesis of chronic allergic disorders. Here, we show that basophils are responsible for the development of IgE-mediated chronic allergic inflammation independently of T ...
|
||
|
Vliagoftis Harissios - - 2005
Mast cells (MCs) are major effector cells of immunoglobulin E (IgE)-mediated allergic inflammation. However, it has become increasingly clear that they also play important roles in diverse physiological and pathological processes. Recent advances have focused on the importance of MCs in both innate and adaptive immune responses and have fostered ...
|
||
|
Qiao H-L - - 2005
BACKGROUND: Excessive production of interleukin (IL)-4, IL-13 and interferon (IFN)-gamma is thought to be important in the development of allergic disease and atopy. Several investigators have linked the IL-4 and IL-4R genes to allergic disease and atopy. The aim of this study is to further explore the mechanism of penicillins ...
|
||
|
Mortaz Esmaeil - - 2005
Mast cells play pivotal roles in immediate-type and inflammatory allergic and nonallergic reactions. Cross-linking of the high-affinity receptor for IgE (FcepsilonRI) on mast cells activates a signaling pathway leading to Ca2+ mobilization and is followed by degranulation and the release of histamine and other preformed mediators, as well as de ...
|
||
|
Schaub B - - 2005
Neonatal immune responses have been associated with the development of atopy in childhood. We assessed in cord blood mononuclear cells (CBMC) whether increased allergen/mitogen-induced lymphoproliferation (LP) is associated with pro-allergic Th2 cytokine IL-13 or Th1 cytokine IFN-gamma secretion. We determined whether LP to one allergen is related to heightened lymphocyte ...
|
||
|
Gibbs B F - - 2005
Basophils have often stood in the shadow of their tissue-fixed mast cell counterparts which share some, common features, such as high-affinity IgE receptor expression and the ability to release histamine. That rodent mast cells produce a variety of pro-allergic and inflammatory cytokines has further added to the deception that basophils ...
|
||
|
Fish Susan C - - 2005
IL-4 and IL-13 are potent cytokines that drive production of IgE, which is critical to the development of atopic disease. In this study, we directly compared IgE generation and IgE-dependent mast cell effector function in mouse strains lacking IL-4, IL-13, IL-4 + IL-13, or their common receptor component, IL-4Ralpha. Although ...
|
||
|
Peters-Golden Marc - - 2005
OBJECTIVE: To review the role of cysteinyl leukotrienes (cysLTs) in allergic rhinitis and the scientific rationale for therapy with leukotriene receptor antagonists (LTRAs). DATA SOURCES: Relevant basic science and clinical articles were identified by a search of the PubMed database for articles published from 1984 to 2004 using the following ...
|
||
|
Nunomura Satoshi - - 2005
The beta-chain of the high-affinity receptor for IgE (FcepsilonRI) plays a crucial role for amplification of the intracellular signaling in mast cells upon FcepsilonRI cross-linking by IgE*antigen complexes (IgE*Ag). Some monomeric IgE as well as IgE*Ag stimulate FcepsilonRI-signaling pathways, leading to cell activation, whereas the biological functions of the beta-chain ...
|
||
|
Kadkhoda Kamran - - 2005
The cumulative activity of benzo(a)pyrene (BP) as one of the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons which is present in diesel exhaust particles on systemic immune responses was studied in mice after intranasal instillation and in vitro exposure to allergens. The main purpose was to elucidate whether BP has an adjuvant effect in ...
|
||
|
González Pereyra María Laura - - 2005
Minthostachys verticillata (Griseb.) Epling is a South American traditional medicinal herb used as digestive, anti-spasmodic, anti-inflammatory and bronchial dilator agent among other uses. Its anti-microbial activity against staphylococcal strains and its anti-viral properties against HVS-1 and strain RC/79 of PrV have been demonstrated. To determine the immunomodulating ability of M. ...
|
||
|
Reisinger Jürgen - - 2005
BACKGROUND: Respiratory allergen contact is the critical event in the elicitation and boosting of allergen-specific immune responses, as well as in the induction of immediate and late inflammatory reactions. OBJECTIVE: We sought to investigate the influence of various factors of allergic inflammation on the integrity and barrier function of respiratory ...
|
||
|
Rückert René - - 2005
IL-15 has been shown to accelerate and boost allergic sensitization in mice. Using a murine model of allergic sensitization to OVA, we present evidence that blocking endogenous IL-15 during the sensitization phase using a soluble IL-15Ralpha (sIL-15Ralpha) suppresses the induction of Ag-specific, Th2-differentiated T cells. This significantly reduces the production ...
|
||
|
Hunt J R F - - 2005
BACKGROUND: Coexistence with harmless microorganisms such as lactobacilli, saprophytic mycobacteria and some helminths, throughout evolution, may have shaped the host immune system. Exposure to such organisms may have therapeutic benefits by triggering immunoregulatory mechanisms that control inappropriate immune responses to self, gut contents or allergens. OBJECTIVE: We determined whether treatment ...
|
||
| < 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 > | ||