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Zecevic N - - 1998
Myelin basic protein (MBP) is a major myelin constituent produced by oligodendrocytes in the central nervous system (CNS). Expression of MBP was considered to be a marker for oligodendrocyte differentiation and myelination in the developing CNS. In this study, expression of myelin basic protein (MBP) and its messenger RNA (mRNA) ...
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Bogdan F - - 1998
An experimental model was established to observe the lymphoplasmocytic and macrophage reaction at distance, in spleen, following the intraperitoneal administration of Coxsackie B3 virus. In the aftermath of the experimental viral aggression the thymo-dependent immune system did not seem altered, while the thymo-independent one was severely challenged. The immune reaction ...
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Grewal I S - - 1998
CD40-CD154-mediated contact-dependent signals between B and T cells are required for the generation of thymus dependent (TD) humoral immune responses. CD40-CD154 interactions are however also important in many other cell systems. CD40 is expressed by a large variety of cell types other than B cells, and these include dendritic cells, ...
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Rocha G - - 1998
Corneal transplantation is the most successful of organ transplants due to the fact that the eye is an immunologically privileged site, and the cornea is an immunologically privileged tissue. The factors responsible for this include presence of the blood-aqueous barrier, the avascularity of the cornea, the absence of classic antigen-presenting ...
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Bianchi M - - 1998
A bidirectional flow of informations exists between the central nervous system and the immune system. Cytokines play a crucial role in this communication and exert several neuromodulatory actions. This short review considers some data concerning the effects of several cytokines, interleukin (IL)-1, IL-2, IL-6 and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor on scopolamine-induced ...
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Klein S L - - 1998
Males generally exhibit reduced immune responses and greater susceptibility to disease than females. The suppressive effect of testosterone on immune function is hypothesized to be one reason why males have lower immune responses than females. Presumably, this effect of testosterone should be more pronounced among polygynous than monogamous species because ...
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Feleder C - - 1998
Immune system alterations coexist with modifications in the reproductive axis. The bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS) has inflammatory effects and stimulates cytokine release in the hypothalamus where LHRH neurons are located. LPS inhibition of LHRH release at hypothalamic level appears to be associated with modifications in the cerebral immune system. Central ...
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Koner B C - - 1997
Oxygen free radicals (OFRs) generated during biological processes are reportedly involved in the pathogenesis of several disease states and various reports have indicated that oxidative stress may alter immune competence. Hence, effects of in-vivo generation of OFRs by using xanthine/xanthine oxidase (X/XO) system on immune responsiveness were evaluated in rabbits. ...
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Ryng S - - 1997
A series of 5-aminomethinimino-3-methyl-4-isoxazolecarboxylic acid phenylamides 4 has been prepared by condensation of 5-amino-3-methyl-4-isoxazolecarboxylic acid phenylamides 1 with trichloroacetic aldehyde. Alcoholysis of trichloro derivatives 2 gave 5-alkoxymethine derivatives 3 which, on reaction with an appropriate amine, formed the corresponding compounds 4. The compounds obtained were evaluated for their immunological activity. ...
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Ortego J - - 1997
The ocular ciliary epithelium is a bilayer of neuroepithelial cells specialized in the secretion of aqueous humor fluid and the regulation of intraocular pressure. In this study, we report on the expression of the regulatory peptide neurotensin (NT) and a set of differentiated neuroendocrine markers including neurotensin receptors (NTrs), the ...
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Phillips K E - - 1997
2',3'-dideoxyinosine (ddI) is one of several purine analogues used for the treatment of HIV and the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). These nucleoside analogues are promising in their inhibition of viral reverse transcriptase and termination of DNA synthesis. However, each of these drugs has toxicity associated with its use. A previous ...
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Van Kampen K R - - 1997
Immunomodulation is now possible in veterinary medicine with the licensure of a number of biological products by the United States Department of Agriculture for veterinary use. These products activate primarily macrophages, induce the production of cytokines, and have various effects on the activity and proliferation of B and T lymphocytes. ...
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Cohn L A - - 1997
When administered at pharmacological dosages, glucocorticosteroid hormones alter leukocyte kinetics, phagocytic cell function, cell-mediated immunity, and, to a lesser extent, humoral immunity. These properties are used to advantage in the treatment of immunologically mediated disease. Corticosteroids are used to suppress pathological immune responses associated with autoimmunity, inhibit rejection of allogenic ...
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Immune responsiveness of splenocytes after chronic daily melatonin administration in male Syrian ...
Champney T H - - 1997
The interrelationships between the immune system and the pineal hormone, melatonin, have been explored recently. The present studies investigated the effects of daily melatonin injections on reproductive and spleen function in male Syrian hamsters. Testes weights and serum testosterone levels were depressed after 8-10 weeks of daily melatonin injections. Melatonin-treated ...
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Sharma S B - - 1997
The present study was undertaken to study the effect of a herbal formulation (Septilin) as immunomodulator, on immune response in mice. The study of this formulation in respect to humoral and cell mediated immune response has suggested that, oral administration of Septilin (500 mg/kg) alone or in combination with an ...
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Sigal L H - - 1997
Although Borrelia burgdorferi is found at the site of many manifestations of Lyme disease, local infection may not explain all features of the disease. Previous work has demonstrated that the organism's flagellin cross-reacts with a component of human peripheral nerve axon, heat shock protein 60. The cross-reacting epitope is identified ...
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Bonetti B - - 1997
We used immunohistochemistry to assess the role of humoral and cellular factors in endoneurial microangiopathy and epineurial vasculitis in 15 nerve biopsies of patients with axonal neuropathy and monoclonal or mixed cryoglobulinemia (CG). Deposition of immunoglobulins and cytolytic complement was detected in endoneurial capillaries of patients with mixed CG. Epineurial ...
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Gómez Marín J E - - 1997
The T1 (interferon-gamma, interleukin-12, interleukin-2) and T2 (interleukin-4, interleukin-10, interleukin-6) cytokine groups constitute two polar responses of the immune system. The T1 group is a predominantly cellular response, while the T2 group response is mainly humoral. The hypothesis forwarded here links these subgroups of induced cytokines to the various clinical ...
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Wheeler J G - - 1997
Studies of the effects of yogurt on immunity and atopic diseases have suggested improvements in cytokine (interleukin-2 and interferon-gamma) responses and clinical scores in patients with allergic rhinitis. This study compares prospectively immune parameters of participants who received 16 oz of yogurt versus 16 oz of milk/day in a randomized ...
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Grewal I S - - 1997
For several years, the primary function of CD40 ligand (CD40L) has been believed to be in regulation of contact-dependent, CD40-CD40L-mediated signals between B- and T-cells, which are essential for the regulation of thymus-dependent (TD) humoral immune responses. Recently, a flurry of reports indicate that CD40 is expressed by variety of ...
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GliĆski Z - - 1997
The interest of marine invertebrates as food resources provides a major interest to study molluscan immunity for better understanding of the host response to pathogens. Molluscs possess a natural immunity formed by anatomical and chemical protective barriers that prevent damage of the underlying tissues, body fluid losses and the infections ...
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Sigal L H - - 1997
Lyme disease, caused by Borrelia burgdorferi, causes a multisystem inflammatory ailment, although the precise means of tissue damage are not well understood. It is clear that the organism is present at the site of inflammation in many organs and that many of the features of the illness are relieved by ...
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Pabst H F - - 1997
To study the kinetics of humoral as well as cellular immunity to measles and to test for associated immunosuppression 124 12 month old children were studied twice, before routine MMR and either 14, 22, 30, or 38 days after vaccination. Plaque reduction neutralization (PRN) titres were determined at these time ...
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Angulo Y - - 1997
Six horses were immunized with the venoms of Bothrops asper, Crotalus durissus durissus and Lachesis muta stenophrys for the production of polyvalent (Crotalinae) antivenom. During the immunization, clinical and laboratory alterations were evaluated in these animals, and the development of humoral immune response was followed. Only moderate local tissue changes ...
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Khan N - - 1997
In the recent past, the importance of the fish brain monoaminergic system in aggression, mating and feeding has been documented. There are several apparent similarities between the functioning of the fish and mammalian monoaminergic systems. In fish, the hypermetabolism of catecholamines (norepinephrine and dopamine) and indoleamine (serotonin, 5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) has ...
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Bansal A S - - 1997
The presence of auto-antibodies and hypergammaglobulinaemia in patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) suggest an overactive humoral immune system. Serum cytokines, measured using in-house double monoclonal sandwich ELISA, were used to assess the state of cellular and humoral immunity in this condition by comparison with sex and age matched normal ...
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Merrill JT - - 1996
The prevalence of autoimmune diseases in women may be the consequence of a bidirectional signaling network between hormones and the immune system that regulates female reproductive life. Two prototypical autoimmune diseases, rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus, arise from 2 different immune responses that generate mutually exclusive signals in response ...
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Leitner G - - 1996
The effects of gonadal hormones, testosterone (Te) and estrogen (E2) as factors in the development of the immune system in two lines, high response (HC) and low response (LC), of broiler chickens divergently selected for early or late immune maturation were studied. For this purpose, plasma Te and E2 levels ...
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Abe A - - 1996
The idiotypic determinants of a B cell neoplasia could provide a tumor-specific target for vaccinating patients against their B cell tumors. Several approaches for inducing idiotype-specific immunization have been reported, but their major theoretical focus was related to the induction of humoral immunity. We have investigated an immunization procedure with ...
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McGahan M C - - 1996
BACKGROUND: There is a clinical impression that bleeding into sites of inflammation exacerbates the inflammatory response. It has been hypothesized that hemoglobinic iron (Fe) contributes to this response by catalyzing free radical reactions. In the present study, the effects of autologous hemoglobin on the inflammatory response to endotoxin was determined. ...
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Kamada H - - 1996
T cells play a principal role in cellular immunity and govern the regulatory mechanism in humoral immunity. Therefore, T cells play a key role as either effectors or regulators in the immune network. Mizoribine (MZR), an immunosuppressive agent, suppresses both humoral and cellular immunity by acting on both T cells ...
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Agishi T - - 1996
Multiple administration of the generally called immunosuppressing agents is the usual fashion for suppressing/ameliorating the rejection reaction that inevitably occurs after organ allotransplantation. Although a definite mechanism of the rejection reaction has not been elucidated, evidence has accumulated that cellular components, such as T- and B-lymphocytes, and humoral factors, such ...
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Resetkova E - - 1996
Experimental evidence suggests that interference with gp39-CD40 interactions may have therapeutic potential in prevention of certain autoimmune disorders (i.e., collagen-induced rheumatoid arthritis). The binding between CD40 expressed on mature B cells and CD40 ligand (CD40L, gp39) transiently expressed on activated T helper cells (Th) further stabilizes the interactions (between Th ...
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Schneider S - - 1996
The effects of 2 weeks of refeeding by cyclic enteral nutrition on chronically malnourished (mean global nutritional deficiency 19.9 +/- 1.1%) hospitalized patients were assessed in a prospective study with special attention paid to immunological status. All patients were immunodeficient, with cell-mediated immunity being more affected than humoral immunity. After ...
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Hassett D E - - 1996
Inoculation with plasmid DNA vectors encoding immunogenic proteins induces both humoral and cell-mediated immune responses, which often provide protective immunity. Although many questions regarding the mechanism, efficacy and safety of DNA immunization remain to be addressed, this approach may offer a safer and more cost-effective alternative to conventional vaccines.
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Taylor A W - - 1996
The microenvironments of the eye and brain are physiologically adapted to protect their delicate structures and functions from damaging immunogenic inflammation (delayed-type hypersensitivity). This adaptation is immune privilege. Aqueous humor, the fluid filling the ocular anterior chamber, suppresses antigen-stimulated primed T cells from mediating inflammation by inhibiting the production of ...
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Tokuyama Y - - 1996
The role of retinoids was analyzed in directing isotype switching to IgA and IgG1 (IgE) by LPS-stimulated murine μ(+)B-cells in the presence of two Th2-type cytokines, IL-4 and IL-5. All trans retinoic acid (RA) enhanced the production of IgA at high concentrations (10-100 nM) in the presence of IL-5. Addition ...
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Rodgers K - - 1996
Malathion, when administered at noncholinergic doses, was previously shown to enhance the humoral immune response to a T-dependent antigen, sheep red blood cells (SRBC), and macrophage function. In addition, malathion was shown to cause mast cell degranulation. The hypothesis that mast cells contribute to the observed alterations in humoral immunity ...
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Hässig A - - 1996
Immune competence is considered as a state of equilibrium between humoral and cellular immunity. This notion fits well with the functionally antagonistic cytokine profiles in cell groups of CD4(+)-helper cells as described by Mosmann and Coffman. The Th-1 cells release mainly IL-2, IL-12 and IFN gamma and thereby stimulate the ...
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Tawfik A F - - 1996
The effects of the beta-lactamase inhibitors, clavulanic acid, sulbactam and tazobactam on normal immune responses were investigated. These agents did not interfere with either humoral or cell-mediated immune responses as measured by the hemolytic plaque assay and delayed type hypersensitivity reaction assay respectively. In addition, human polymorphonuclear leukocyte phagocytic activity ...
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Kaplan J M - - 1996
To evaluate the host immune response to long-term repeat administration of adenovirus vector, rhesus monkeys were treated at intervals of approximately 3 weeks with up to 18 instillations of Ad2/CFTR-2, a second generation vector encoding the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR). All monkeys instilled with Ad2/CFTR-2 developed a significant ...
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Kim H M - - 1996
Effect of antioxidants on humoral immune responses, such as butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT), n-propyl gallate (PG) and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) is suppression in vitro antibody production. These antioxidants all inhibited T-dependent B cell response, not T-independent and polyclonal B cell response. These data suggest that antioxidants suppress humoral immunity by suppression ...
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Xu J - - 1996
L-selectin is a homing receptor that mediates the selective attachment of leukocytes to specialized high endothelial venules. To study the potential role of L-selectin in immune responses in intact mice, we generated L-selectin-deficient mice by gene targeting. L-selectin-deficient mice are defective in cutaneous delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) responses when tested after ...
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Fan F - - 1996
There is much discussion about the occurrence of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD)-induced effects on the human immune system. Extensive studies have been conducted in mice, but those results cannot explain some of the epidemiological data obtained in exposed humans. Therefore, studies in other laboratory animal species are needed. The aim of these ...
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Cebrat M - - 1996
Hymenistatin I (HS-I), a cyclic octapeptide [c-(-Pro-Pro-Tyr-Val-Pro-Leu-Ile-Ile-)], was synthesized by the solid-phase peptide synthesis method and examined for its immunosuppressive activity in the humoral and cellular immune responses. The peptide activity was tested on cell lines producing various cytokines. The results are compared with the activity of the well-known immunosuppressive ...
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Marchetti B - - 1995
The interactions between the nervous, endocrine and immune systems require a complex communication network. The central nervous system (CNS) affects the immune system through endocrine, paracrine and neuronal mechanisms. Evidence that this bidirectional communication plays a vital role in the regulation of physiological homeostatic mechanisms while a disfunction of the ...
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Kerkvliet N I - - 1995
2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) and structurally similar halogenated aromatic hydrocarbons cause a broad range of immunologic effects in experimental animals including decreased host resistance to infectious disease and suppressed humoral and cell-mediated immune responses. In the mouse, TCDD immunotoxicity has been shown to be an aryl hydrocarbon (Ah) receptor-dependent process. However, despite ...
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Han Y C - - 1995
A previous study in this laboratory demonstrated that a single dose of EtOH causes thymic atrophy and that elevated levels of endogenous glucocorticoids are responsible, at least in part, for this effect. In the present study using the same animal model, the effect of EtOH on the T-dependent antibody response ...
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Mor G - - 1995
The number, type, and location of cytokine- and Ab-secreting cells activated in mice immunized and boosted with plasmid DNA encoding the circumsporozoite protein of the malarial parasite Plasmodium yoelii (PyCSP) were monitored. The initial humoral response was localized to the draining lymph nodes and was characterized by production of IgG1 ...
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Lagergård T - - 1995
Haemophilus ducreyi is the etiological agent of chancroid, a sexually transmitted disease that is common in developing countries and that has characteristic genital mucocutaneous lesions. The adherence and growth of bacteria on the surface of eukaryotic cells, and the production of cytotoxin(s) result in cell damage that may be responsible ...
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