Sentences with phrase «immunologists from»

For the work, Kasper's microbiology team collaborated with immunologists from the HMS lab run by Diane Mathis and Christophe Benoist.
As part of the long - term study LINA, environmental immunologists from Leipzig have been focussing on tobacco smoke as an environmental stressor.
«Now,» the immunologists from Leipzig explicate, «we will know more about the molecular processes that trigger off stressors from smoke during pregnancy.»
«It is clear that we need to move beyond these estimates and develop systems in these countries that measure deaths,» says Walter Orenstein, an immunologist from Emory University in Atlanta.
July 21, 2015 Central Illinois physician donates $ 3.5 million for cancer research Anjuli Nayak, a renowned allergist and immunologist from Bloomington who received cancer treatment at the University of Chicago Medicine, is endowing a $ 3.5 million professorship at the medical center for leukemia research.

Not exact matches

Not only microbes protect against asthma evidently, but also farm animals: Petting cats and cows and drinking farm milk can also prevent asthma, as the team of researchers headed up by Remo Frei of the Swiss Institute of Allergy and Asthma Research from the University of Zurich in cooperation with the Center for Allergy Research and Education (CK - CARE) in Davos and the Children's Hospital of Eastern Switzerland in St. Gallen: «Early childhood contact with animals and the consumption of food of animal origin seems to regulate the inflammatory reactions of the immune system,» says immunologist Frei.
Immunologist Dr Dan Neill, who is the other first author added: «This finding may explain why patients often suffer from recurrent infections with the same bacterial strain as continual re-infection of the lungs from the upper airways can take place.»
«Putting animals (or electrical control equipment) in a basement within a stone's throw from a tidal river is not a wise idea,» immunologist Alan Frey wrote in an e-mail to Nature after losing all of his mice, which were housed at the Smilow.
Although the group didn't identify the toxin's target, it probably causes cells to die from within by overstimulating the immune system, says immunologist Harry Hill of the University of Utah.
That connection was strengthened by immunologist Madeleine Cunningham, a rheumatic fever expert from the University of Oklahoma.
Still other journals publish work from the members of their scientific society, such as the American Society for Microbiology's Journal of Bacteriology or the American Association of Immunologists» Journal of Immunology.
In tomorrow's Nature, a team led by immunologist Rolf Zinkernagel from the University Hospital in Zurich, Switzerland, suggests that animals may gain lifelong immunity to some viral infections by retaining a bit of viral DNA inside their cells like a souvenir.
Now, immunologists at the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases in Bethesda, Maryland, have contaminated lab mice in a different way: by giving them gut bacteria from wild mice.
After decades of hopes raised and dashed, pediatricians, immunologists, and others are cautiously hopeful that new biological insights and a push for treatment from parents - to - be could turn the tide for prenatal stem cell therapy.
And several responses to the GSI policy have been posted online, including an open letter from a group of new investigators, a letter from the University of Pennsylvania, and comments from the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and the American Association of Immunologists.
13 In 1974 immunologist William Summerlin created a sensation when he claimed to have transplanted tissue from black to white mice.
But cancer biologists and immunologists have begun to realize that the progression from diseased tissue to full - blown invasive cancer often requires cells that normally participate in healing cuts and scrapes to be diverted to the environs of the premalignant tissue, where they are hijacked to become co-conspirators that aid and abet carcinogenesis.
CEPH's involvement in gene mapping goes back to 1980 when Jean Dausset, a Nobel prizewinning immunologist and geneticist, set up the institute with a 50 million franc bequest from a wealthy art collector.
Immunologist Steven Schutzer of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey examined samples of cerebrospinal fluid, the clear liquid that surrounds the brain and spinal cord, from patients with each syndrome.
University of North Carolina immunologist Myron Cohen was amazed to hear thunderous cheers from the audience of scientists and clinicians at the sixth International AIDS Society Conference on HIV in Rome last July.
The discrepancy in effect may result from a subtle difference between animal and human immune systems, says immunologist James Riley of the University of Pennsylvania.
The surprising finding, reports immunologist Shannon Turley in the January 2007 issue of Nature Immunology, is that dendritic cells share this job with another group of cells far removed from the intestine.
Now they have some good news about the herpes virus family: Ironically named viral immunologist Herbert Virgin from Washington University School of Medicine has come up with some pretty convincing evidence that infection with two other members of the herpes virus family — the Epstein - Barr virus, which causes mononucleosis, and the relatively harmless cytomegalovirus — can actually protect a person from a range of bacterial infections.
Three decades later, about 56,000 Iranians are coping with lingering health effects from the blistering agent, ranging from skin lesions and failing corneas to chronic obstructive lung disease and possibly cancer, says Tooba Ghazanfari, an immunologist at Shahed University here.
Immunologist William Parker of Duke University examined samples of normal tissue from organ donors and from patients who had healthy appendixes removed during other surgeries.
In one of the studies, a team led by immunologist Mark Pepys of the Royal Free and University College Medical School in London, United Kingdom, treated mice with a protein from cobra venom that sops up a key complement protein.
Immunologist Sharon Evans of Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo, New York, and coworkers are studying how fever affects the movement of white blood cells, or lymphocytes, from the blood into lymphoid tissue, where they learn to recognize and fight pathogens.
A new perspective on mortality came in the 1950s from distinguished British immunologist Sir Peter Medawar.
To better understand how the different pieces of the immune system develop, immunologists Florent Ginhoux and Naomi McGovern at the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A * STAR) in Singapore and their colleagues studied tissue from nearly 100 elective abortions performed between 14 and 22 weeks of gestation.
The immunologist at the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases proposed that alarm signals released from injured and dying cells can kick our immune system into high gear even when no microbial threat is evident.
Immunologist J. Lee Nelson of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle took blood cells from 94 diabetes patients, their healthy siblings, and two dozen unrelated adults.
Over the years, Dr. Kronenberg has received many major awards, including a prestigious Merit Award for scientific achievement from the National Institutes of Health, the Distinguished Service Award by the American Association of Immunologists.
This opportunity also reflects a larger trend among biotechs and pharmaceutical companies — it used to be that commercial entities wouldn't take a call from an immunologist, and now our email inboxes are full each day with requests from them.
AAI Veterinary Immunology Committee Neonatal Immunity: Getting it Right from the Start Support in part provided by the American Association of Veterinary Immunologists Saturday, May 5, 12:30 PM — 2:30 PM, Room 19AB Chairs: Crystal Loving, Natl. Animal Dis.
Dr. Leo Stamatatos, an immunologist in Fred Hutch's Vaccine and Infectious Disease Division, has received funding from the National Institutes of Health to begin manufacturing an HIV vaccine candidate designed to stimulate the production of broadly neutralizing antibodies and to test the experimental vaccine in human clinical trials.
Immunologists are employed in a varied range of organisations across different areas in science and medicine from the NHS, pharmaceutical / biotech industries to universities.
He is the recipient of the New York City Mayor's Award for Excellence in Science and Technology, the American Association of Immunologists - Invitrogen Meritorious Career Award, the Ross Prize in Molecular Medicine, the Vilcek Prize in Biomedical Science, and the William B. Coley Award for Distinguished Research in Basic Immunology from the Cancer Research Institute.
In no event shall The American Association of Immunologists, Inc., be liable for any special, incidental, indirect or consequential damages of any kind, or any damages whatsoever resulting from loss of use, data or profits, whether or not advised of the possibility of damage, and on any theory of liability, arising out of or in connection with the use or performance of this information.
The Institute began its laboratory operations in 1989 with the arrival of two pioneering immunologists, Dr. Kimishige Ishizaka and Dr. Teruko Ishizaka, from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland.
But exactly how the signal from a single receptor, among thousands on each T cell, can be amplified to affect a whole cell has puzzled immunologists for decades.
The research, which was funded as part of a collaboration with the University of Oxford, involved professor Peter Andrew from the University of Leicester's Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation and professor Chris Bayliss from the University of Leicester's Department of Genetics and Genome Biology, the hepatobiliary and pancreatic surgeon Ashley Dennison from Leicester's Hospitals, the immunologist Luisa Martinez - Pomares from the University of Nottingham and the expert in bacterial pathogenesis Richard Moxon from the University of Oxford.
This routine from immunologist Dr. Amy Shah will help you restore your body's release of melatonin naturally.
He taught me a lot about evolutionary medicine and nutrition in general, opened many doors and introduced me (directly and indirectly) to various players in this field, such as Dr. Boyd Eaton (one of the fathers of evolutionary nutrition), Maelán Fontes from Spain (a current research colleague and close friend), Alejandro Lucia (a Professor and a top researcher in exercise physiology from Spain, with whom I am collaborating), Ben Balzer from Australia (a physician and one of the best minds in evolutionary medicine), Robb Wolf from the US (a biochemist and the best «biohackers I know»), Óscar Picazo and Fernando Mata from Spain (close friends who are working with me at NutriScience), David Furman from Argentina (a top immunologist and expert in chronic inflammation working at Stanford University, with whom I am collaborating), Stephan Guyenet from the US (one of my main references in the obesity field), Lynda Frassetto and Anthony Sebastian (both nephrologists at the University of California San Francisco and experts in acid - base balance), Michael Crawford from the UK (a world renowned expert in DHA and Director of the Institute of Brain Chemistry and Human Nutrition, at the Imperial College London), Marcelo Rogero (a great researcher and Professor of Nutrigenomics at the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil), Sérgio Veloso (a cell biologist from Portugal currently working with me, who has one of the best health blogs I know), Filomena Trindade (a Portuguese physician based in the US who is an expert in functional medicine), Remko Kuipers and Martine Luxwolda (both physicians from the Netherlands, who conducted field research on traditional populations in Tanzania), Gabriel de Carvalho (a pharmacist and renowned nutritionist from Brazil), Alex Vasquez (a physician from the US, who is an expert in functional medicine and Rheumatology), Bodo Melnik (a Professor of Dermatology and expert in Molecular Biology from Germany, with whom I have published papers on milk and mTOR signaling), Johan Frostegård from Sweden (a rheumatologist and Professor at Karolinska Institutet, who has been a pioneer on establishing the role of the immune system in cardiovascular disease), Frits Muskiet (a biochemist and Professor of Pathophysiology from the Netherlands, who, thanks to his incredible encyclopedic knowledge and open - mind, continuously teaches me more than I could imagine and who I consider a mentor), and the Swedish researchers Staffan Lindeberg, Tommy Jönsson and Yvonne Granfeldt, who became close friends and mentors.
Estimates for the rate of gluten sensitivity range from 6 percent of the population to considerably higher — a randomized population sample of 500 people conducted by immunologist Aristo Vojdani, PhD found one in three people had gluten sensitivity.
In the Duration of Immunity to Canine Vaccines: What We Know and What We Don't Know, Proceedings — Canine Infectious Diseases: From Clinics to Molecular Pathogenesis, Ithaca, NY, 1999, Dr Ronald Schultz, a veterinary immunologist at the forefront of vaccine research and chair of the University of Wisconsin's Department of Pathobiological Sciences, outlines the duration of immunity for the following vaccines:
With support from a Duke / NC State Translational Research Grant from the Duke Clinical & Translational Science Institute, Eward and colleague Jonathan Fogle, a veterinary immunologist at NC State, are working to improve those odds for people and their pets by capitalizing on aspects of the disease that are unique to canines.
It is the consensus of immunologist that a modified live virus vaccine must replicate in order to stimulate the immune system, and antibodies from a previous vaccination will block the replication of the new vaccinate virus.
As someone who has a big interest in the overvaccination issue of dogs, and is well read on the topic, I can tell you and Claudia that from conversations with veterinary experts such as prestigious immunologist Ron Schultz, PHd from Wisconsin vet school and Jean Dodds, DVM, that if dogs are vaccinated for parvo or distemper over 16 to 18 weeks of age that immunity lasts MANY years if not the life of the animal.
The following quote, from Ron Schultz, Ph.D., and Tom Phillips, DVM, appeared in Current Veterinary Therapy XI in 1992 (This is a purely conventional textbook, and Drs. Schultz and Phillips are respected veterinary immunologists in the academic community):
From his lab at the University of Virginia's Centre for Open Science, immunologist Dr Tim Errington runs The Reproducibility Project, which attempted to repeat the findings reported in five landmark cancer studies.
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