Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
The Immunoregulation Of Autoimmune Diabetes, Hao Hu
The Immunoregulation Of Autoimmune Diabetes, Hao Hu
Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations
How autoimmune diseases are regulated is a long-term research topic in the autoimmunity field. We use autoimmune diabetes as a model to study this. Autoimmune diabetes is a T cell-dependent autoimmune syndrome. The functions of T cells are regulated during their development and activation. Developmentally, T cells will undergo a stringent thymic selection: a process that self-reactive T cells are tolerized to become thymic derived Tregs or can be deleted by apoptosis based on binding affinity and avidity between the TCRs and self-peptide:MHC complexes. After T cells mature, they can also be tolerized in the periphery in many other ways, …
Peripheral Nerve Macrophages And Their Implications In Neuroimmunity, Peter Leon Wang
Peripheral Nerve Macrophages And Their Implications In Neuroimmunity, Peter Leon Wang
Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Macrophages are innate immune cells that protect against pathogens and maintain tissue integrity. In vertebrates, macrophages reside in every tissue where they perform specific functions from early development through adulthood. While macrophages provide important functions across all tissues, a major focus in recent years has been the role of resident brain macrophages, known as microglia, in neurodegeneration. As microglia have been shown to affect brain development, homeostasis, and disease, they demonstrate how immune cells critically mediate neurological health and point to the broader significance of neuroimmune interactions, or the coordinated actions of the nervous and immune systems for maintaining tissue …
Examining Early Interactions Between Innate Airway Resident Immune Cells And Mtb-Specific Factors During Pulmonary Infection With Mycobacterium Tuberculosis, Micah D. Dunlap
Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is the leading cause of death by an infectious agent in the world today, infecting roughly one quarter of humans. Despite this, the mechanisms of early pathogenesis and host protective innate immune responses remain poorly understood and uncharacterized.
Lung resident Alveolar Macrophages (AMs) are the first host contact with Mtb bacilli after inhalation and are thus key mediators of the early pulmonary immune response. AMs are generally believed to reside entirely in the airway, but it was recently demonstrated that they have the capacity to egress and enter into granulomas during pulmonary infection with hypervirulent Mtb. Furthermore, …