Results 251 to 260 of about 84,619 (287)
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Heterologous Strain Immunity in Experimental Syphilis

The Journal of Immunology, 1951
Summary Quantitative techniques previously employed to measure homologous strain immunity in experimental syphilis have been extended to the measurement of heterologous strain immunity among three strains of Treponema pallidum in the rabbit.
H J, MAGNUSON, F A, THOMPSON
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Heterologous Immunity in Human Malaria

The Quarterly Review of Biology, 1973
Human hosts exposed to infection are model systems for studying the interactions of parasites with each other and with their environments. This paper uses published epidemiological data to demonstrate an interaction among the species of human malaria that is expected from ecological and evolutionary theory.
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Private specificities of heterologous immunity

Current Opinion in Immunology, 2006
Antiviral T-cell responses between individuals that have similar major histocompatibility complex molecules share similarities in epitope hierarchies and T-cell receptor variable gene usage (public specificities), yet the T-cell receptor amino acid sequences differ between individuals (private specificities).
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Heterologous immunity: an overlooked barrier to tolerance

Immunological Reviews, 2003
Summary:  In less than 50 years the field of organ transplantation has transitioned from an experimental concept to clinical commonplace. Notwithstanding the dramatic improvements in patient and allograft outcomes, chronic rejection and the complications from life‐long immunosuppressive therapy remain significant problems.
Andrew B, Adams   +2 more
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Heterologous immunity and the CD8 T cell network

Springer Seminars in Immunopathology, 2002
Over the course of a lifetime individuals develop a large complex pool of memory T cells that are specific for a variety of pathogens, including viruses, bacteria and parasites. The obvious role for memory T cells is to provide enhanced protection for an individual upon re-exposure to the original pathogen.
Liisa K, Selin   +3 more
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Adaptation in the innate immune system and heterologous innate immunity

Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences, 2014
The innate immune system recognizes deviation from homeostasis caused by infectious or non-infectious assaults. The threshold for its activation seems to be established by a calibration process that includes sensing of microbial molecular patterns from commensal bacteria and of endogenous signals.
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Antibody Formation After Injection of Heterologous Immune Globulin

The Journal of Immunology, 1956
Summary Foreign sera, their globulin fraction, or washed immune aggregates containing foreign immune globulin were tested for their ability to evoke antibody formation against their immune globulin components. The antibody response against immune globulin was measured by two agglutination methods.
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