Results 201 to 210 of about 13,748 (218)
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Alarmin Detection in Senescent Cells

2018
Senescent cells secrete diverse array of proteins. One group of proteins, damage-associated molecular pattern (DAMP) proteins exhibit relocalization from inside to outside the cell. High Mobility Group Box 1 protein (HMGB1) is the founding DAMP member. HMGB1 relocalization from the nucleus provides a molecular signature during senescence.
Dong Eun, Kim, Albert R, Davalos
openaire   +2 more sources

Alarmins: chemotactic activators of immune responses

Current Opinion in Immunology, 2005
The recruitment and activation of antigen-presenting cells are critical early steps in mounting an immune response. Many microbial components and endogenous mediators participate in this process. Recent studies have identified a group of structurally diverse multifunctional host proteins that are rapidly released following pathogen challenge and/or ...
Joost J, Oppenheim, De, Yang
openaire   +2 more sources

ApoC3: an ‘alarmin’ triggering sterile inflammation

Nature Immunology, 2019
NLRP3-driven sterile inflammation facilitates the pathogenesis of various human inflammatory diseases. New work identifies apolipoprotein C3 as an endogenous NLRP3 agonist that promotes sterile inflammation and organ damage.
Tao Gong, Rongbin Zhou
openaire   +2 more sources

Alarmin’ lymphoid developments

Science Signaling
The alarmin cytokine IL-33 stimulates the formation of immune hubs within otherwise “cold” tumors.
openaire   +2 more sources

Endothelial Injury, Alarmins, and Allog raft Rejection

Critical Reviews™ in Immunology, 2008
Allograft blood vessels are important targets of clinical allograft rejection. Perioperative allograft injury to graft vasculature, especially the endothelial cell (EC) lining, increases the risk of subsequent acute and chronic vascular rejection. We hypothesize that allograft EC injured by ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) during transplantation releases ...
Deepak A, Rao, Jordan S, Pober
openaire   +2 more sources

Is HMGB1 an osteocyte alarmin?

Journal of Cellular Biochemistry, 2007
AbstractThe death of osteocytes, the terminally differentiated cells of the osteoblast lineage that are embedded in bone and regulate remodeling, is significant to both normal and pathological bone resorption. Apoptotic osteocytes putatively release a clarion signal that enhances the development of the bone‐resorbing osteoclasts and targets their ...
Joseph P, Bidwell   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

The danger from within: alarmins in arthritis

Nature Reviews Rheumatology, 2016
Alarmins (also known as danger signals) are endogenous molecules that are released to the extracellular milieu after infection or tissue damage. Extracellular alarmins interact with specific receptors expressed by cells that are engaged in host defence to stimulate signalling pathways that result in initiation of innate and adaptive immune responses ...
Meriam, Nefla   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Harnessing the Alarmin HMGN1 for Anticancer Therapy

Immunotherapy, 2015
Incipient cancer cells formed as a result of mutations of oncogene(s), tumor suppressor gene(s) and/or DNA repair gene(s) develop into malignant tumors depending on three processes. They acquire a higher rate of mutation due to increased sensitivity to endogenous and exogenous mutagenic agents or due to a breakdown in one or several components of the ...
De, Yang   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

[Alarmins and surgical injury].

Rozhledy v chirurgii : mesicnik Ceskoslovenske chirurgicke spolecnosti, 2019
Surgical intervention is an inseparable part of the management of serious surgical disease. However, surgery also presents a potential risk related to the so-called surgical injury causing immune response. When dysregulated the immune activation is able to cause local complications (i.e. wound dehiscence, impaired healing).
J, Máca, M, Peteja
openaire   +1 more source

Alarmins

2014
Claus Kerkhoff   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

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