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Cell Adhesion Molecules

Science, 1983
It has been proposed that cell-cell recognition occurs by means of local cell surface modulation of a small number of proteins rather than by expression of large numbers of different cell surface markers. Several different cell adhesion molecules (CAM's) have now been found in a number of vertebrate species in different tissues such as ...
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Cell-cell adhesion molecules

Biochemical Society Transactions, 1991
Cellebiologi
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Cell adhesion molecules and the kidney

Pediatric Nephrology, 1994
Cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) have been implicated in various biologic processes, including morphogenesis, immune response, and thrombosis. There are four major groups: integrins, cadherins, immunoglobulin superfamily members, and selectins. Certain CAMs are differentially expressed in the developing, normal, and cancerous kidney.
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T cell adhesion molecules

The FASEB Journal, 1988
Cell adhesion or conjugate formation between T lymphocytes and other cells is an important early step in the generation of the immune response. Although the antigen‐specific T cell receptor confers antigen recognition and specificity, a number of other molecules expressed on the T cell surface are involved in the regulation of ...
B E, Bierer, S J, Burakoff
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Epithelial cell adhesion molecules

Experimental Cell Research, 1986
Recognition and binding between cells are of fundamental importance for a proper function of multicellular organisms, both during embryonic development and in the adult stage. Recently several cell surface proteins that are involved in these phenomena have been discovered.
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Cell adhesion molecules in vasculitis

Current Opinion in Rheumatology, 1997
Activation of the vascular endothelium by several different stimuli plays a crucial role in the initiation, localization, and propagation of vascular injury. In vitro studies have demonstrated that activation of cultured vascular endothelial cells renders them hyperadhesive for leukocytes.
J W, Tervaert, C G, Kallenberg
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Synaptic Cell Adhesion Molecules

2012
During development of the nervous system following axon pathfinding, synaptic connections are established between neurons. Specific cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) accumulate at pre- and postsynaptic sites and trigger synaptic differentiation through interactions with intra- and extracellular scaffolds. These interactions are important to align pre- and
Olena, Bukalo, Alexander, Dityatev
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Cell adhesion molecules at the synapse

Frontiers in Bioscience, 2006
Synapses are specialized intercellular junctions whose specificity and plasticity provide the structural and functional basis for the formation and maintenance of the complex neural network in the brain. The number, location, and type of synapses formed are well controlled, since synaptic circuits are formed in a highly reproducible way.
Kimberly, Gerrow, Alaa, El-Husseini
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Cell adhesion molecules as morphoregulators

Current Opinion in Cell Biology, 1995
Many significant advances have been made recently in our understanding of the structure and function of cell adhesion molecules (CAMs). The most provocative, however, are those that indicate that CAM-mediated adhesion may lead to changes in gene expression and those that suggest that the expression of CAM genes may be regulated by the products of Hox ...
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Adhesion molecules in cell interactions

Current Opinion in Immunology, 1993
During a successful immune response, several families of adhesion molecules participate in a cascade of binding events that lead to the binding of leukocytes, both to each other and to cell types such as the endothelium and epithelium. A central theme emerging from recent studies is that the function of an adhesion receptor cannot be inferred from its ...
N, Hogg, R C, Landis
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