Results 311 to 320 of about 288,801 (335)
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IMMUNE AND NON‐IMMUNE PRECIPITATION OF HUMAN SERA WITH GONOCOCCI AND MENINGOCOCCI

Acta Pathologica Microbiologica Scandinavica Series C: Immunology, 1982
Sera from 218 healthy humans were examined by double‐diffusion and counter‐electrophoresis against the ultrasonically‐disrupted N. gonorrhoeae strain 8551 and the group B N. meningitidis strain Ne 15. All the sera examined contained precipitins against one or more antigens common to the bacteria.
Johan A. Maeland, Terje O. Rød
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The influence of normal and immune sera on the adsorption of Brucellaphages

Zeitschrift für Medizinische Mikrobiologie und Immunologie, 1966
Anti-Brucella serum blocks the phage adsorbing capacity of the aceton substrates of Brucella abortus, Brucella suis and Brucella melitensis. The same sera partially blocks the Francisella tularensis substrate. Normal serum does not influence Brucellaphages adsorption on Brucella substrates.
J. Parnas, Stefania Zalichta
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Production of Immune Anti‐Lewis Sera in Goats

Vox Sanguinis, 1976
Abstract. Incomplete anti‐Lec, anti‐Led, anti‐Les (anti‐Leb+Led), anti‐Lens (anti‐ Lea+Lec), anti‐Lem (anti‐Leb + Lec) and anti‐Lex (anti‐Lea+Leb) antibodies were prepared by the immunization of goats with boiled saliva, absorbing the resulting sera with trypsinized erythrocytes.
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Neutralization of the Biological Activity of Erythropoietin by Immune Sera*

British Journal of Haematology, 1964
Erythropoietin has been thought to possess only slight antigenicity (Jacobson, Goldwasser and Gurney, 1959; Lowy, Keighley, Borsook and Graybiel, 1959). Schooley and Garcia (1962a), however, recently reported the production of neutralizing antibodies to human urinary erythropoietin.
E. Gardner   +3 more
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Antibody Specificity for HL‐A in Human Myeloma Sera and Immune Rabbit Sera

Tissue Antigens, 1974
Antibodies specific for HL‐A antigens were found in sera of two out of four patients with multiple myeloma or gammopathy in the absence of known histoincompatible stimulation. By column chromatography fractionation of the sera the antibody activity was found in the abnormal immunoglobulin peak, and technical difficulties of cytotoxic testing of ...
B. Fishkin, R. L. Walford, G. Smith
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The Nature of Immune Complexes in Human Cancer Sera

The Journal of Immunology, 1977
Abstract Sera from 517 patients with various types of malignancies were assayed for immune complexes (ICs) by the Raji cell radioimmune assay. The incidence of immune complexes in these patients ranged from 16 to 52% as compared to 19% in normal controls.
A N, Theofilopoulos   +4 more
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Suppression of sprouting at the neuromuscular junction by immune sera

Nature, 1984
Injury of afferent motor axons or pathological loss of motoneurones from the spinal cord causes the remaining axons within a muscle to sprout and to reinnervate the denervated muscle fibres. Sprouting occurs at two sites along intramuscular axons, at nodes of Ranvier (nodal sprouting) and at the neuromuscular junction (terminal sprouting).
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Immune complex assays and stored normal human sera

Journal of Immunological Methods, 1983
Abstract Normal human sera were tested for immune complexes (IC) by 3 different tests: Clq-binding ELISA (ClqB-ELISA), conglutinin binding ELISA (KgB-ELISA) and platelet iodinated protein A test (PIPA). 118 sera stored for various times were tested in 3 separate groups: 45 freshly obtained sera (group 1), 38 sera stored at -20°C for 1.5 years and ...
Pirkko Lindström   +3 more
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The use of polyethyleneglycol for immune complex detection in human sera

Molecular Immunology, 1979
Abstract Proteins precipitated from diluted sera of patients suffering from diseases with circulating immune complexes (IC) by 3.75% polyethyleneglycol were studied. The low solubility at neutral pH and the good solubility at pH 2.8 with the finding of immunoglobulins and complement components in these precipitates and the presence of aggregates ...
V. Hašková   +4 more
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DETECTION OF CIRCULATING IMMUNE COMPLEXES IN PATHOLOGICAL HUMAN SERA

The Lancet, 1975
The results of attempts to detect circulating immune complexes in sera by two methods are described. Both rely on the binding of the first complement component (C1) to the complex for its detection. The results, using these methods, of attempts to show which patients have complexes which contain nucleic acid and hence possibly viral antigens in the ...
J.F. Mowbray   +2 more
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