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Antigenicity of a Bacterial Deoxyribonucleic Acid [PDF]
SINCE earlier evidence (refs. 1–3 and Medawar, P. B., personal communication) suggesting a serological reactivity for deoxyribonucleic acid (or the deoxyribonueleic acid moiety of a nucleoprotein) has been indirect or controversial, the problem has been re-investigated with the aid of a preparation rich in deoxyribonucleic acid with transforming ...
Werner Braun+3 more
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Bacterial ghosts as antigen delivery vehicles [PDF]
The bacterial ghost system is a novel vaccine delivery system unusual in that it combines excellent natural intrinsic adjuvant properties with versatile carrier functions for foreign antigens. The efficient tropism of bacterial ghosts (BG) for antigen presenting cells promotes the generation of both cellular and humoral responses to heterologous ...
Petra Walcher+5 more
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Bacterial Antigen in the Kidney
New England Journal of Medicine, 1969The role of bacterial infection in the pathogenesis of chronic pyelonephritis has been one of the fruitful areas of controversy in recent years.
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Antigen Discovery in Bacterial Panproteomes
2020There is still a lack of vaccines for many bacterial infections for which the best treatment option would be a prophylactic one. On the other hand, effectiveness has been questioned for some existing vaccines, prompting new developments. Therapeutic vaccines are also becoming a treatment option in specific cases where antibiotics tend to fail.
Xavier Daura+3 more
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Bacterial Antigens as Immunomodulators
1984The functioning of lymphocytes and macrophages may be significantly altered following exposure to gram positive and gram negative bacteria or to the biologically active components of these microorganisms.1,2 Immunomodulating substances related to bacteria have been found to either enhance or inhibit the functioning of immune cells.
R. Christopher Butler+2 more
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More on Bacterial Antigen in the Kidney
New England Journal of Medicine, 1973Chronic pyelonephritis remains a confused and confusing entity. One of the chief reasons is the loose way in which the term is applied to kidneys that show parenchymal scars in which there is predominantly tubular loss, interstitial fibrosis accompanied by chronic inflammatory cells, and variable changes in glomeruli, which in their extreme form are ...
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Antigenic variability of bacterial RNA polymerases [PDF]
Radioimmunoassay analysis of enteric and some other Gram-negative bacteria has shown that the antigenic structure of the RNA polymerase alpha subunit is more conserved than that of the beta and beta' subunits. Since anti-alpha antibodies do not affect RNA polymerase activity, the constraints which determine the low variability of the antigenic ...
Vadim Nikiforov+2 more
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The antigenic properties of bacterial spores
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, 19441°. Bacterial spores are antigenic. 2°. Spore-antigen is distinct and separate from the antigens of the bacillary forms to which the spores give rise on germination. 3°. Antigens of the spores of various kinds of spore-bearing bacilli are also mutually distinct. I am greatly indebted to Miss A.de Groot for her technical assistence.
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Early detection of bacterial antigens by counterimmunoelectrophoresis
European Journal of Pediatrics, 1980Counterimmunoelectrophoresis (CIE) is described as a rapid and specific method for early detection of bacterial antigens. This simple and reliable technique was applied to samples of serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from 67 patients in whom neonatal septicemia or bacterial meningitis was initially suspected.
P. Lemburg, Wolfgang Storm
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American Journal of Ophthalmology, 1928
The bacterial antigen referred to was used in eight cases which are described; usually for treatment of an active uveitis, but sometimes as a prophylactic against the possible results of infection after an injury. Read before the Ophthalmic Section of the Saint Louis Medical Society, April 20, 1928.
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The bacterial antigen referred to was used in eight cases which are described; usually for treatment of an active uveitis, but sometimes as a prophylactic against the possible results of infection after an injury. Read before the Ophthalmic Section of the Saint Louis Medical Society, April 20, 1928.
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