Results 301 to 310 of about 3,846,927 (338)
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The Bennett‐ Goodspeed Antigen or Antigens

Vox Sanguinis, 1963
SummaryMany sera used in blood grouping contain a second antibody. Not infrequently this belongs to what appears to be a family of antibodies called variously anti‐Donna, anti‐Sturgeon, anti‐Ho, anti‐Bennett‐Goodspeed, anti‐Price, etc. The reactions with the sera are not always reproducible. The antigen was found in 7 out of 158 unrelated parents. In 5
B, Chown, M, Lewis, H, Kaita
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Carbohydrate antigens

Current Opinion in Organ Transplantation, 2012
To summarize the current knowledge of carbohydrate antigens as related to xenotransplantation. The emphasis is on non-Gal carbohydrate antigens identified in many institutes. In addition, several topics such as glycosyltransferase-transgenic pigs, innate cell receptors and porcine endogenous retrovirus (PERV) will be discussed.Studies related to iGb3 ...
Shuji, Miyagawa   +4 more
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Antigen presentation, antigen-presenting cells and antigen processing

Current Opinion in Immunology, 1988
To summarize, during the period under review there have been considerable advances in our understanding of how antigen is associated with MHC on the surface of a presenting cell. Basic rules which govern this association have been confirmed as including both the nature and the configuration of the antigen.
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Rotavirus Antigens

1985
The rotaviruses are important medical and veterinary pathogens that cause acute diarrheal disease in children and in the young of most mammalian and avian species. The successful development of a rotavirus vaccine should significantly reduce worldwide infant morbidity and mortality and economic losses and increase food-production.
M K, Estes, D Y, Graham
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EPIDERMAL ANTIGENS

International Journal of Dermatology, 1977
Autoantibodies in man may develop to antigens present in all of the major anatomical areas of the epidermis, namely the nuclei and cytoplasm of keratinocytes, the dermal-epidermal junction, the intercellular substance, and the stratum corneum. The antigens in all of these areas are polymorphic.
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Glioma Antigen

2012
Because several antigenic peptides of human tumors that are recognized by T-lymphocytes have been identified, immune responses against cancer can now be artificially manipulated. Furthermore, since T-lymphocytes have been found to play an important role in the rejection of tumors by the host and also to have antigen-specific proliferative potentials ...
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Antigen-antigen receptor interactions

Current Opinion in Structural Biology, 1991
Abstract The genetic basis of antigen receptor diversity is understood for both B and T cell systems. Structural aspects of five specific antibody-antigen interactions have also been described. During the past year, new data comparing the structures of liganded and unliganded antibodies have given support to the hypothesis that there exists a ...
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Antigenized antibodies

Nature, 1992
A new process, antigenization of antibodies, consisting of the expression of oligopeptides in the hypervariable loops of an antibody molecule is described. The potential applications of antigenized antibodies are discussed.
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Antigens, Antigenicity, and Immunogenicity

2015
The initiation of an immune response requires the interaction between T cells, B cells, and antigen-presenting cells (APCs), which form central components of almost all immune responses, and antigens, substances recognized as foreign by the immune system. The ability of an antigen to combine with antibody reflects the property of antigenicity.
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Carcinoembryonic Antigen

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1986
The level of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) is often elevated in the serum of patients with cancer. This article reviews the clinical usefulness of this observation. Carcinoembryonic antigen is not useful for detecting asymptomatic cancer; its sensitivity and specificity are not high, particularly for early stages of disease, so in populations with low
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