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Immune System
Immune System

... Immunity that occurs naturally as a result of a person's genetic constitution or physiology and does not arise from a previous infection or vaccination. ...
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Immune System and Disease Review

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Lymph vocab Test

... 15. fire chemicals secreted by WBC’s exposed to foreign substances in the body which causes the normal body temperature to increase 16. is a mixture of dead or dying neutrophils, broken-down tissue cells, & living & dead pathogens. (prefix=pyo). ...
23. Frenkel lecture: FMD vaccine development - past and future
23. Frenkel lecture: FMD vaccine development - past and future

... However, the response of CD4 and CD8 T cells isolated from infected cattle are consistently low compared to the response to control antigens, despite the absence of generalised immunosuppression in the FMDV infected cattle. The specific CD4 response to vaccination is variable. MATERIAL AND METHODS B ...
Autoimmune Disease
Autoimmune Disease

... attack is directed against the cross-reacting body component. One of the best-characterized examples of molecular mimicry is the relationship between the M protein of Streptococcus pyogenes and the myosin of cardiac muscle. Antibodies against certain M proteins cross-reactions can be involved, but m ...
Non-specific Immune Response
Non-specific Immune Response

... An antigen is any part of an organism that is recognised as being non-self by the immune system and stimulates the immune response. (anti –antibody, gen-generator) – Usually proteins or glycoproteins on the cell plasma membrane or cell wall of invading pathogen. ...
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Evolution of Immune Systems

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Lec.2 Dr.Maysem M.Alwash Hypersensitivity Reaction s (cont.)

MALFUNCTIONS of the IMMUNE SYSTEM
MALFUNCTIONS of the IMMUNE SYSTEM

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Presentation slides - Yale School of Medicine

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Cell permeable Foxp3 protein converts CD4 T cells to suppressor
Cell permeable Foxp3 protein converts CD4 T cells to suppressor

< 1 ... 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 >

Molecular mimicry

Molecular mimicry is defined as the theoretical possibility that sequence similarities between foreign and self-peptides are sufficient to result in the cross-activation of autoreactive T or B cells by pathogen-derived peptides. Despite the promiscuity of several peptide sequences which can be both foreign and self in nature, a single antibody or TCR (T cell receptor) can be activated by even a few crucial residues which stresses the importance of structural homology in the theory of molecular mimicry. Upon the activation of B or T cells, it is believed that these ""peptide mimic"" specific T or B cells can cross-react with self-epitopes, thus leading to tissue pathology (autoimmunity). Molecular mimicry is a phenomenon that has been just recently discovered as one of several ways in which autoimmunity can be evoked. A molecular mimicking event is, however, more than an epiphenomenon despite its low statistical probability of occurring and these events have serious implications in the onset of many human autoimmune disorders. In the past decade the study of autoimmunity, the failure to recognize self antigens as ""self,"" has grown immensely. Autoimmunity is a result of a loss of immunological tolerance, the ability for an individual to discriminate between self and non-self. Growth in the field of autoimmunity has resulted in more and more frequent diagnosis of autoimmune diseases. Consequently, recent data show that autoimmune diseases affect approximately 1 in 31 people within the general population. Growth has also led to a greater characterization of what autoimmunity is and how it can be studied and treated. With an increased amount of research, there has been tremendous growth in the study of the several different ways in which autoimmunity can occur, one of which is molecular mimicry. The mechanism by which pathogens have evolved, or obtained by chance, similar amino acid sequences or the homologous three-dimensional crystal structure of immunodominant epitopes remains a mystery.
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