Search Results
Results 451 - 500 of 883
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Reljic Rajko - - 2004
Potent Fcalpha-mediated actions of IgA have previously been shown for myeloid cells from man, but much less is known in relation to murine cells. Here, we report that mouse monoclonal IgA, irrespective of their antigenic specificity, inhibit the proliferation of mouse macrophage cell lines. The anti-proliferative activity was manifested by ...
Barreau F - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Stressful events in the early period of life (for example, maternal deprivation) have been shown to modify adult immune and gastrointestinal tract functions. The present study aimed to establish whether maternal deprivation affects colonic epithelial barrier and the development of an experimental colitis in adult rats. METHODS: Male Wistar ...
Mathers Alicia R - - 2004
Mucosal and parenteral immunizations elicit qualitatively distinct immune responses, and there is evidence that mucosal immunization can skew the balance of T helper 1 and T helper 2 responses. However, a clear picture of the effect of the route of infection on the balance of the T helper responses has ...
Afuwape A O - - 2004
Most studies investigating the induction of oral tolerance (OT) use purified proteins such as ovalbumin (OVA), bovine serum albumin (BSA) and beta-lactoglobulin (beta-LG). Little information is available regarding the induction of OT to a protein mixture, e.g. cow's milk. In this study we compared the regulatory mechanisms induced after the ...
Kataoka Kosuke - - 2004
Nasal immunization is an effective way to induce both mucosal and systemic immune responses. In this study, we assessed a cDNA vector for Flt3 ligand (FL) for its potential to enhance mucosal immunity or tolerance. Interestingly, tolerance was avoided and elevated levels of OVA-specific Ab responses were induced in nasal ...
Nicollier-Jamot Béatrice - - 2004
We investigated the immune response induced by mucosal immunization of BALB/c mice with virus-like particles (VLPs) of a genogroup II norovirus, Dijon171/96 virus, produced in the baculovirus system. VLPs administered alone by the intranasal route induced a high serum antibody response as well as fecal IgA, which were enhanced when ...
Sfeir Rose Mary - - 2004
Food protein intake interacts with the immune system. In earlier nutritional and immunological studies, nutrients, particularly milk whey proteins, were generally administered in soluble form and by gavage. However, orogastric intubation does not represent a natural way of ingesting nutrients such as lactoferrin (Lf). We examined how different modes of ...
Malkevitch Nina - - 2004
Combination vaccine regimens in which priming with recombinant DNA is followed by boosting with recombinant viral vectors have been shown in previous studies to effectively enhance cellular immunity. However, no information exists concerning possible synergy of the cellular immune response when DNA immunization is followed by administration of a recombinant ...
Melo Marco E F - - 2004
Nasal installation or oral feeding of antigens can alter the subsequent immune response in animals and humans. Most mucosal treatments with antigens tend to down-regulate disease, inducing full tolerance or immune deviation; however, priming has also been reported. We evaluated the course of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) in (SJL x ...
Huntley J F - - 2004
A technique to take sequential tissue biopsy samples in multiparous, periparturient ewes from the abomasal mucosa is described, developed in parallel in Scotland and New Zealand. Samples were extracted via abomasal cannulae inserted into the wall of the abomasum and exteriorised through dorso-ventral laparotomy. Animals recovered quickly post-surgery, and tolerated ...
Qadri F - - 2004
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The general concept is that as Vibrio cholerae is not invasive, it mediates a non-inflammatory type of infection. This is being re-evaluated based on available data that natural cholera infection or cholera toxin induces a Th2-type of immune profile and stimulates the humoral immune response, innate cells, ...
Pilette Charles - - 2004
Despite our knowledge on the role of IgA in mucosal homeostasis and host defense and clinical evidence suggesting deficient first-line defense mechanisms in chronic airway disorders, little is known regarding its role in asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Studies suggest that the mucosal IgA response is impaired in ...
Cunningham-Rundles S - - 2004
Mucosal immune response is primed at birth and responses generated at this time support specific immunity in later life. Conversely development of mucosal immune response to new antigens is diminished in aging. Availability of key nutrients that are conditionally essential especially in the context of sub-acute infections may limit immune ...
Vinderola C G - - 2004
AIMS: To investigate whether there is a relationship between interaction sites in the gut, hydrophobicity, mucosal immunomodulating capacities and cell wall protein profiles in lactobacilli, bifidobacteria and enterococci. METHODS AND RESULTS: Hydrophobicity, cell wall protein profiles and sites of interaction in the gut (by using fluorescein isothiocyanate-labelled bacteria) were determined ...
Fidel Paul L. - - 2003
The pathogenesis of vulvovaginal candidiasis, which is caused by Candida albicans, is poorly understood. Despite a strong protective role for cell-mediated immunity (CMI) against other mucosal candidal infections, numerous studies in humans and most animal models have revealed little to no role for CMI or other forms of acquired immunity ...
Sacks Gordon S - - 2003
Pneumonia and intra-abdominal abscesses are significantly lower in trauma patients receiving enteral feeding compared with those receiving parenteral feeding. Extensive experimental evidence suggests that this is related to maintenance of the mucosal-associated lymphoid tissue, which provides immunologic protection for both the gastrointestinal and respiratory tracts against microbial flora and infectious ...
Duncan M - - 2003
Chemotherapy and radiotherapy, whilst highly effective in the treatment of neoplasia, can also cause damage to healthy tissue. In particular, the alimentary tract may be badly affected. Severe inflammation, lesioning and ulceration can occur. Patients may experience intense pain, nausea and gastro-enteritis. They are also highly susceptible to infection. The ...
Williams James E - - 2003
Most antigens, particularly viruses, enter the body through the mucosal epithelia where they are carried by afferent lymphatics to regional lymph nodes for presentation to the immune system. Although they share immunological similarities, immune processes that protect the mucosa are distinct from innate and acquired immunity. The barrier formed by ...
Davenport Victoria - - 2003
Naturally acquired protective immunity against Neisseria meningitidis is thought to partially explain the disparity between the high levels of carriage in the human nasopharynx and the rare incidence of disease. To investigate this immunity to Neisseria meningitidis at the mucosal level, in vitro cellular responses to outer membrane vesicle preparations ...
Veazey Ronald - - 2003
Recent progress in HIV-1 and SIV pathogenesis has revealed that mucosal tissues, primarily the gastrointestinal tract, are major sites for early viral replication and CD4+ T-cell destruction, and may be the major viral reservoir, even in patients receiving HAART. This is likely attributable to the fact that the majority of ...
Vajdy M - - 2003
Mucosal surfaces comprise the largest surface area of the human body and are the first line of defense against many pathogens. In fact, over 90% of common infectious disease pathogens in humans gain access to the host through mucosal membranes. A number of studies have demonstrated that mucosal immunizations induce ...
Vajdy Michael - - 2003
It is estimated that Helicobacter pylori infects the stomachs of over 50% of the world's population and if not treated may cause chronic gastritis, peptic ulcer disease, gastric adenocarcinoma and gastric B-cell lymphoma. The aim of this study was to enhance the mucosal and systemic immune responses against the H. ...
Souroujon Miriam C - - 2003
We have shown that mucosal administration of recombinant fragments corresponding to the human acetylcholine receptor (AChR) alpha subunit suppresses chronic ongoing experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis (EAMG) in rats. Treated animals exhibit a Th1 to Th2/Th3 shift in their cytokine profile and downregulation of costimulatory factors. However, application of a xenogeneic ...
Lü Fabien X - - 2003
To determine the effect of the ovarian hormone cycle on immunity, immunoglobulin-secreting cell (ISC) frequency and lymphocyte subsets were examined in the blood of healthy women. We found that immunoglobulin A (IgA)-secreting cells (IgA-ISC) were fourfold more frequent than IgG-ISC in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). Further, the ISC frequency ...
Wang Jian-Ying - - 2003
Epithelial cells line the gastrointestinal (GI) mucosa and form an important barrier that protects the subepithelial tissue against a wide array of noxious substances, allergens, viruses, and luminal microbial pathogens. Restoration of mucosal integrity following injury requires epithelial cell decisions that regulate signaling networks controlling gene expression, survival, migration, and ...
Dörr W - - 2003
PURPOSE: Repopulation processes, i.e. the tissue regeneration responses to radiotherapy with increasing overall treatment time, are the predominant factors defining the radiation tolerance of turnover tissues, such as squamous epithelia of the skin or gastrointestinal tract. The purpose was to assess experimental approaches for the modulation, i.e. stimulation of repopulation, ...
Christensen Hanne R - - 2003
The bacterial single-cell protein BioProtein (BP; Norferm Danmark, Odense, Denmark), produced by fermentation of natural gas with methanotrophic bacteria, is a potential protein source for man and animals. For human consumption, removal of the nucleic acid is necessary. Preliminary studies have shown that ingested BP induces a specific immune response. ...
Paalangara Reji - - 2003
The response of the mucosal immune system of 4-6-week old lambs to viable Trichostrongylus colubriformis larvae was compared in two groups of animals, one exposed to T. colubriformis antigen and the other to saline while in utero. Exposure to larval antigen two-thirds of the way through gestation resulted in significant ...
Macaubas Claudia - - 2003
Understanding the pathways involved in the induction and maintenance of respiratory tolerance to airborne allergens is important in designing new therapies for asthma and other allergic diseases that not only control disease symptoms, but also change or potentially cure the disease. Respiratory tolerance, and mucosal immunity are maintained by a ...
Watanabe Mamoru - - 2003
Inflammatory bowel disease is thought to result from inappropriate activation of mucosal immune responses. Intestinal epithelial cells produce interleukin (IL)-7 that serves as a regulatory factor for IL-7 receptor (IL-7R)(+) mucosal lymphocytes. The pivotal role of mucosal IL-7/IL-7R dependent signals in the activation of mucosal immune responses that lead to ...
Vishwanatha Jamboor K - - 2003
Smokeless tobacco usage is a growing public health concern in the United States. Epidemiological evidence shows a correlation between use of chewing tobacco, lesions of the oral cavity and the incidence of oral and other cancers. However, the molecular mechanism(s) underlying the oral cancer causation are yet unknown. The major ...
Fernandez M Isabel - - 2003
Intestinal epithelial cells (IEC) play a central role in innate and acquired mucosal immunity. They ensure early signaling to trigger an inflammatory response against pathogens. Moreover, IEC mediate transcytosis of dimeric IgA (dIgA), through the polymeric-immunoglobulin receptor (pIgR), to provide secretory IgA, the major protective Ig in mucosal secretions. Using ...
Ikeda Shigeo - - 2003
OBJECTIVE: To determine the influence of route of nutrition on gut mucosal addressin cellular adhesion molecule-1 (MAdCAM-1) expression and the effect of MAdCAM-1 blockade on gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) lymphocyte populations and established respiratory antibacterial immunity. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA: Lymphocytes, sensitized to antigens in Peyer's patches, migrate via mesenteric lymph ...
Pestka James J - - 2003
Dietary exposure to the common foodborne mycotoxin deoxynivalenol (DON) selectively upregulates serum immunoglobulin A (IgA) in the mouse, most of which is polymeric, thus suggesting that the mucosal immune system is a primary target. When ingested, DON has no adjuvant or antigen properties but, rather, induces polyclonal IgA synthesis and ...
Lazarus Nicole H - - 2003
IgA immunoblasts can seed both intestinal and nonintestinal mucosal sites following localized mucosal immunization, an observation that has led to the concept of a common mucosal immune system. In this study, we demonstrate that the mucosae-associated epithelial chemokine, MEC (CCL28), which is expressed by epithelia in diverse mucosal tissues, is ...
Zouboulis Christos C - - 2003
The aetiology of Adamantiades-Behçet's disease remains unknown and its pathogenesis is not fully understood. Linked intrinsic and extrinsic factors are thought to contribute to the development of the disease, which probably occurs by environmental triggering of a genetically determined disorder. Transmission is solely vertical, indicating that the disease is not ...
Rescigno M - - 2003
Dendritic cells are potent activators of the immune response. They reside in tissues which interface the external environment, but we shall see that they do not perform only a passive role by monitoring microorganisms that have entered the body. Rather, DC can actively participate to microbial entry across mucosal surfaces ...
Harandi Ali M - - 2003
A large proportion of pathogens either invade through, or cause disease at mucosal surfaces. Many new generation mucosal vaccine candidates lack important immunostimulatory features of the original pathogens and thus often do not elicit sufficiently strong immune responses. Despite numerous efforts, there is a profound lack of available agents with ...
Johansson Martina - - 2003
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Despite much interest in the mechanisms of immune protection against sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), little is known about the role of the immune system in the genital tract. A better knowledge is needed to understand not only host protection against STDs, but also how tolerance is established ...
Granucci Francesca - - 2003
Recent studies of mucosal immunity suggest a key role for dendritic cells in the regulation of gut immune responses, in both physiological and pathological conditions. Dendritic cells are widely distributed in the lamina propria of the gut and are involved in direct bacterial uptake across mucosal surfaces, which questions the ...
Tonnaer Edith L G M - - 2003
OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS: The observation that during otitis media many different types of micro-organisms have been cultured from effusions indicate that, once present in the middle ear cavity, most types of micro-organisms are able to trigger an inflammatory reaction leading to otitis media. The present study was designed to determine the middle ...
Waaij, Laurens Anthonie van ...
The aim of this thesis is to investigate the interaction of the commensal colon microflora with the mucosal immune system in healthy subjects and patients with IBD. We particularly focussed on the humoral immune response. As a measure of the mucosal humoral immune response towards commensal colon bacteria we analysed ...
Boyaka Prosper N - - 2003
The mucosal immune system has evolved alongside, but separate, from the general systemic immune system. As a major consequence of this dichotomy, only immune responses initiated in mucosal inductive sites can result in effective immunity in mucosal tissues themselves. Oral tolerance, as usually assessed as orally-induced systemic unresponsiveness, contributes to ...
Gärdby Eva - - 2003
In this study, we show that costimulation required for mucosal IgA responses is strikingly different from that needed for systemic responses, including serum IgA. Following oral immunization with cholera toxin (CT) adjuvant we found that whereas CTLA4-H1 transgenic mice largely failed to respond, CD28-/- mice developed near normal gut mucosal ...
Phipps Paula A - - 2003
Oral administration of the uveitogenic peptide (aa 336-351) derived from human HSP60 induced clinical and histological manifestations of uveitis in 65.8% (48/73) of Lewis rats. Uveitis was significantly decreased to 16.7% (11/66) in parallel experiments with the peptide linked to recombinant cholera toxin B subunit (rCTB), also given by mouth ...
Fagarasan Sidonia - - 2003
Immunoglobulin A is the most abundant immunoglobulin isotype in mucosal secretions. In this review, we summarize recent advances in our understanding of the sites, mechanisms and functions of intestinal IgA synthesis in mice. On the basis of these recent findings, we propose an updated model for the induction and regulation ...
Opal Steven M - - 2003
Recombinant human interleukin (IL)-11 is a multifunctional cytokine with hematopoietic, immunomodulatory, and epithelial cell protective activities. IL-11alpha receptors are expressed on the luminal surface of intestinal epithelial cells. It was hypothesized that orally administered IL-11 would prevent mucosal damage and protect against microbial invasion in a neutropenic rat model of ...
Suckow Mark A - - 2002
Pasteurella multocida is an important bacterial pathogen of domestic rabbits. To evaluate the ability of a thiocyanate extract (PTE) of P. multocida to stimulate an immune response and protect against infection with P. multocida, rabbits were immunized subcutaneously or intranasally on Days 7, 21 and 35. Cholera toxin, a potent ...
Shanahan Fergus - - 2002
Colonization with bacteria is critical for the normal structural and functional development and optimal function of the mucosal immune system. Unrestrained mucosal immune activation in response to bacterial signals from the lumen is, however, a risk factor for inflammatory bowel disease. Therefore, mucosal immune responses to indigenous flora require precise ...
Perdigón G - - 2002
Health claims of lactic acid bacteria (LAB) used in functional foods and pharmaceutical preparations are based on the capacity of these microorganisms to stimulate the host immune system. In this study, the antigenic effect of LAB (Lactobacillus acidophilus, Lactobacillus casei, Lactobacillus delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus) on the gut ...
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