コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 gnancy is associated with recovery of CD4+ T cell immunity.
2 ges of tumor inception to subvert adaptive T cell immunity.
3 tion of human DCs compromises WNV-specific T cell immunity.
4 icant impact on HPV-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cell immunity.
5 an innate link between viral infection and B cell immunity.
6 s are an essential component of long-lived T cell immunity.
7 ed partly on induction of sustainable host T-cell immunity.
8 subsets that likely compromise anti-tumor T cell immunity.
9 ubjects has a significant effect on T- and B-cell immunity.
10 okine family involved in the regulation of B-cell immunity.
11 s in nanoparticles for inducing anticancer T-cell immunity.
12 ir JAK/STAT pathways play pivotal roles in T cell immunity.
13 s but did not explain the defect in CD8(+) T cell immunity.
14 critical for the generation of protective T cell immunity.
15 eous and PD-L1-blockade-mediated antitumor T cell immunity.
16 d "atypical" SCID show reduced, not absent T-cell immunity.
17 ction of IL-1beta, and defective antiviral T cell immunity.
18 r sterols and oxysterols in macrophage and T-cell immunity.
19 review examines the effects of MS DMTs on B-cell immunity.
20 ire is fundamental to our understanding of B-cell immunity.
21 and atg5 in regulating TLR signalling and B-cell immunity.
22 en-presenting cells to stimulate antitumor T-cell immunity.
23 the generation of an optimal effector CD8 T cell immunity.
24 epsis might facilitate the recovery of CD8 T cell immunity.
25 as associated with enhanced virus-specific T-cell immunity.
26 lay an important role in the regulation of B-cell immunity.
27 nd inhibits formation of pathogen-specific T cell immunity.
28 nction of FcgammaRIIB in regulating CD8(+) T cell immunity.
29 TP on innate proinflammatory responses and T-cell immunity.
30 , suggesting interference of carriage with T-cell immunity.
31 fied E2A and E2-2 as central regulators of B cell immunity.
32 nism involving the inhibition of antitumor T-cell immunity.
33 class II expression, suggesting a role in T cell immunity.
34 fiers to explore the long-term dynamics of T cell immunity.
35 immunogenicity for inducing antibodies and T cell immunity.
36 development of vaccines that evoke optimal T cell immunity.
37 d qualitatively altered YF-specific CD4(+) T cell immunity.
38 ing as a viable approach to augment CD8(+) T-cell immunity.
39 r (NK) cells, macrophage polarization, and T-cell immunity.
40 udies unveil an essential role of Gpx4 for T cell immunity.
41 pecific subsets of dendritic cells and CD8 T cell immunity.
42 y bowel disease-all with severely impaired T-cell immunity.
43 ter with a conditioning regimen to restore B-cell immunity.
44 inadequacy to evade HLA-A*02:01-restricted T-cell immunity.
45 t peptide is virtually unable to stimulate T cell immunity.
46 01 molecule, and play an important role in T-cell immunity.
47 immunoregulatory cytokine IL-10 suppresses T-cell immunity.
48 characterized by their ability to inhibit T cell immunity.
49 tissue in part by evading antiviral CD8(+) T cell immunity.
50 of Th17 cells to preserve an effective HIV T-cell immunity.
51 survival by inducing robust tumor-specific T-cell immunity.
52 verlapping and yet distinct mucosal and DC/T cell immunity.
53 re considered to play little or no role in T cell immunity.
54 l strategy to harness endogenous antitumor T-cell immunity.
55 broad spectrum of biological processes of T cell immunity.
56 sm with superior long-term recovery of CD4 T-cell immunity.
57 tion immunotherapies that can fully engage T-cell immunity.
58 ed to low expression of STAT5 and impaired T cell immunity.
59 t endogenous GCs both promote and suppress T cell immunity.
60 IL-2 production to facilitate optimal CD8 T cell immunity.
61 Adaptive evolution is a key feature of T cell immunity.
62 thogenesis, but few studies have evaluated T cell immunity.
63 tment, which is crucial for suppression of T-cell immunity.
64 ced on activated T cells, is important for T-cell immunity.
65 al persistence associates with compromised T cell immunity.
66 n of antigen-presenting cells that promote T-cell immunity.
67 ochemical information and are critical for T-cell immunity.
68 lar source, and timing of Notch signals in T cell immunity.
69 ed to strong cross-priming and durable CD8 T cell immunity.
70 herapy associated with enhanced anti-tumor T cell immunity.
71 ckpoint that is crucial for the control of T cell immunity.
72 systemic poly-functional CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell immunity.
73 ake deficiency severely impaired antitumor T cell immunity.
74 ion, and ablation of FGL1 in mice promotes T cell immunity.
75 and exploit PD-L1/PD-1 signaling to evade T cell immunity.
76 e rather than compromise protective CD8(+) T cell immunity.
77 HR) in TAMs to modulate their function and T cell immunity.
78 for the upregulation of genes involved in T-cell immunity.
79 facilitates the emergence of potent CD8(+) T-cell immunity able to durably suppress virus replication
80 n single lymphoma nodes, mediated systemic T-cell immunity accompanied by regression of disseminated
82 help to further characterize MuV-specific T-cell immunity after natural MuV infection or vaccination
83 ween DC dysfunction and impairments in CD8 T cell immunity after sepsis by directly targeting Ag to D
84 al strategies for generating heterogeneous T-cell immunity against cancer, with the appropriate balan
90 g cell motility are essential for adaptive T-cell immunity against infectious pathogens and cancers.
93 that dendritic cells help CD4(+) T helper 1 cell immunity against malaria through PD-L2's competitio
94 pensable for establishing effective CD4(+) T cell immunity against malaria, because it not only inhib
98 ells improves spontaneous antitumor CD8(+) T cell immunity and boosts the efficacy of T cell-based im
101 ss of GCIPL is associated with intrathecal B-cell immunity and constitutes an independent risk factor
102 recently been shown to correlate with anti T-cell immunity and efficacy of checkpoint inhibitor thera
103 the current understanding of HIV-specific T-cell immunity and identify cellular immune responses and
105 phase augmented DC vaccine-induced CD8(+) T-cell immunity and improved antitumor efficacy, suggestin
106 acute stages of sepsis develop compromised T cell immunity and increased susceptibility to infection.
107 tween amino acid metabolism, and effective T cell immunity and its relevance in cancer therapies.
108 to be a crucial component of EBV-specific T cell immunity and more generally for the immune surveill
109 key discoveries in the area of flavivirus T cell immunity and postulate on how these findings can in
110 pressing macrophages that inhibited CD8(+) T cell immunity and promoted CD4(+)Foxp3(+) Treg cell expa
111 he complex regulatory mechanisms governing T cell immunity and regulation of a critical T cell checkp
112 aemia, which leads to the establishment of T-cell immunity and resultant long-term infection control.
114 nses results in significant alterations in T cell immunity and subsequent disease outcome upon reexpo
115 ib destabilizes PD-L1, enhances antitumour T-cell immunity and therapeutic efficacy of PD-1 blockade
119 allele predicted resurgent virus-specific T-cell immunity and viral control at 3-mo postpartum (P =
120 vectors failed to reconstitute B-cell and NK-cell immunity and was complicated by vector-related leuk
121 cations in the investigations on cancer stem cells, immunity and immune modulators, applications with
122 ute infectious agents induce strong CD8(+) T cell immunity, and are thought to therefore represent a
123 9 receptor, a regulator of Th17/regulatory T cell immunity, and atherosclerosis development in animal
124 ential of MDSC, triggered antitumor CD8(+) T-cell immunity, and boosted the efficacy of T-cell immuno
126 for FcgammaRIIB-mediated control of CD8(+) T cell immunity, and instead, the immunosuppressive cytoki
127 ominant mechanism for regionalizing CD4(+) T cell immunity, and location enforces shared transcriptio
128 le-exome sequencing (WES), analyses of VZV T-cell immunity, and pathogen recognition receptor functio
129 ve Th17 polarization and influence mucosal T-cell immunity, and suggest that host pathways to handle
130 viral load, the assessment of CMV-specific T-cell immunity, and the molecular assessment of resistanc
131 contributes to the observed defects in CD8 T cell immunity, and therapeutic approaches designed to im
134 protective and pathogenic roles of GITR in T cell immunity are well characterized, the role of GITR i
136 HSCT recipients we evaluated CMV-specific T-cell immunity at baseline, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months after
138 due to cross-reactive humoral immunity and T cell immunity between common coronaviruses and SARS-CoV-
143 to successful and sustained restoration of T-cell immunity correlated with virologic response and pro
144 s from HPV-16 E6/E7 for which induction of T-cell immunity correlates with disease-free survival in p
146 ) mice were deficient in generating CD8(+) T-cell immunity despite normal clonal expansion, likely du
148 ng imply that exosomes function to promote T cell immunity during a bacterial infection and are an im
150 undamental role in the induction of CD8(+) T cell immunity during viral, intracellular bacterial, and
151 endritic cells, preeminent inducers of CD8 T cell immunity; elicit Th1-promoting inflammation; and la
152 tions about the establishment of effective B cell immunity elicited by vaccination, not just against
153 cytogenes (which induces CD4(+) and CD8(+) T-cell immunity) engineered to express Kras(G12D) (LM-Kras
154 noviral vectored vaccines fails to restore T-cell immunity except where there is genetic mismatch bet
155 cident with development of strain-specific T-cell immunity followed by emergence of cross-reactive vi
156 test to identify recovery of CMV-specific T-cell immunity following hematopoietic stem cell transpla
157 e longitudinal development of the adaptive T cell immunity following immunization with Ag is identifi
165 dies (mAbs) able to reinvigorate antitumor T-cell immunity have heralded a paradigm shift in cancer t
167 ritic cells (cDC1s) for inducing antitumor T-cell immunity; however, strategies to maximize cDC1 enga
168 rrent helminth infection potently inhibits T cell immunity; however, whether helminthes prevent T cel
169 prospectively analyzed antigen-specific B/T-cell immunity, immune composition of the tumor microenvi
170 ssociated tissue in part by evading CD8(+) T cell immunity.IMPORTANCE CHIKV is a reemerging mosquito-
171 tion to compromise priming of WNV-specific T cell immunity.IMPORTANCE West Nile virus (WNV) is an enc
172 mportant studies on the function of T- and B-cell immunity in atherosclerosis and their manipulation
174 e results suggest the critical role of CD4 T cell immunity in controlling varicella virus latency.
175 ctivation suggests a critical role for CD4 T cell immunity in controlling varicella virus latency.IMP
177 there has been debate about centrality of T cell immunity in defense, these observations support a r
178 understanding the correlates of protective T cell immunity in HIV infection, the optimal approach to
180 therefore a novel functional component of T-cell immunity in latent TB and potential correlate of pr
181 DNA sequencing, and assessed CMV-specific T-cell immunity in LTRs at high risk for CMV events, using
182 ections support the clinical importance of T-cell immunity in mediating protective antiviral effects.
185 lpha therapy fails to boost virus-specific T-cell immunity in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus
188 isplay diminished capacity for controlling T cell immunity in prostate inflammation and cancer models
191 erest to understand if there is a role for T cell immunity in the differential clinical outcome and i
193 We also report pre-existing human CD8+T cell immunity in the majority of healthy individuals scr
194 (TSLPR), yet a direct role for TSLP in CD8 T cell immunity in the mucosa has not been described.
195 n of TSLP levels may promote long-term CD8 T cell immunity in the mucosa when other prosurvival signa
198 lls, and this was accompanied by increased T cell immunity in tumour-bearing mice and patients with c
200 rimentation to better understand antiviral T-cell immunity in vivo Limiting factors in ACT experiment
202 eficiencies are marked by inborn errors of T-cell immunity in which the T cells that are present are
204 e we discuss new approaches to probe human T cell immunity, including novel sampling, that indicate a
205 Identification of positive regulators of T-cell immunity induced during autoimmune diseases is crit
206 he efficient induction of stable antiviral T cell immunity irrespective of the nature of the antigeni
208 s (IAVs), where the recall of IAV-specific T cell immunity is able to protect against serologically d
211 ticular, IFN-gamma-polarized cytotoxic CD8 T cell immunity is considered optimal for protective immun
214 minimal thresholds for effective antiviral T cell immunity is important for clinical decisions in imm
216 tment for malaria and other diseases where T cell immunity is ineffective or short-lived due to PD-1-
219 ery of IL-1beta to determine that adaptive T cell immunity is required for airway remodeling because
222 f IFN-gamma in tuberculosis (TB), and CD4+ T cell immunity is the main target of current TB vaccine c
226 kine pathway is critical in shaping CD8(+) T cell immunity, locally within latently infected tissues,
227 standing of how the existing DMTs modulate B-cell immunity may identify future targets for therapeuti
228 but it is unknown whether disturbances to T cell immunity may render these patients vulnerable to fu
230 he notable implication that restoring CD4+ T cell immunity might contribute to controlling HCV infect
231 hanced dengue infections suggest that poor T-cell immunity might have contributed to protection failu
233 cross-reactivity and how preexisting DENV T cell immunity modulates Zika T cell responses is of grea
234 , we evaluated the contributions to CD8(+) T cell immunity of CD40 expressed on host tissues includin
235 e a dual impact of host adaptive antitumor T-cell immunity on the clinical effectiveness of rapalogs
236 ve generally focused on either stimulating T cell immunity or driving antibody-directed effector func
238 s study, we sought to investigate the role T cell immunity plays in recognizing and controlling genet
240 identifies a IRE1alpha-XBP1-cMyc axis in NK cell immunity, providing insight into host protection ag
241 PO-R signaling on T cells to inhibition of T-cell immunity, providing one mechanism that could explai
242 e molecular mechanisms of vaccine-elicited T cell immunity remains a critical knowledge gap in vaccin
246 tumor defenses and recover the preexisting T-cell immunity required to respond to immunotherapy.
252 parameters of M. tuberculosis-specific CD4 T cell immunity that are impaired in HIV-infected individu
253 ut elicited a systemic Foxp3(+) CD25(+) Treg cell immunity that suppressed diabetes induction by a su
255 the importance of the co-receptor PD-1 in T cell immunity, the upstream signaling pathway that regul
256 urther demonstrate that, unlike evasion of T cell immunity, this viral Fcgamma receptor is not requir
257 ecruitment of mast cells and activation of T cell immunity through C3a are important for parasite con
258 novel insights into how viruses can evade NK cell immunity through the selection of mutations in HLA-
260 allogeneic pancreatic tumor cells, induces T-cell immunity to cancer antigens, including mesothelin.
262 us (CMV) persists in most humans, requires T cell immunity to control, yet tissue immune responses re
265 pitope recognition by CD8(+)T cells, CD4(+)T cell immunity to KSHV may be important for maintaining t
266 culosis infection, and in the evolution of T-cell immunity to M. tuberculosis in response to tubercul
267 eptor 3 (CXCR3) chemokine pathway promotes T cell immunity to many viral pathogens, but its importanc
268 l neoantigens as the basis for ineffective T cell immunity to melanoma and support the concept that t
270 Survival was associated with enhanced T cell immunity to nine of fifteen immunodominant antigens
271 dogenous NK cell and tumor Ag-specific CD8 T cell immunity to provide a marked reduction in tumor bur
272 al pathogens, but its importance in CD8(+) T cell immunity to recurrent herpes has been poorly elucid
277 (LAIV) is unique in its ability to elicit T-cell immunity to the conserved internal proteins of the
279 th an imbalance of T(H)1 versus regulatory T cell immunity toward the retinal protein, recoverin.
280 nhances the human NoV-specific mucosal and T cell immunities triggered by a VSV-based human NoV vacci
281 metabolic regulator controlling antitumor T cell immunity, underscoring the potential of creatine su
283 associated with more pronounced antitumor T-cell immunity via induction of IL17 and IFNgamma-produci
284 ain-containing molecule 4 (Tim4) regulates T-cell immunity via phagocytosis of both apoptotic (high P
285 on; and (iv) inhibiting antitumor adaptive T cell immunity via the programmed death-1 (PD-1)-programm
287 ficient and wild-type neutrophils, whereas T cell immunity was increased in chimeric mice with NGAL-d
288 LRs) and B cell receptors (BCRs) in the TI B cell immunity, we here used MyD88-, TRIF-, and alpha-gal
289 enetic diagnosis nor basic measurements of T-cell immunity were good predictors of disease evolution.
290 successfully sensitized to host antitumor T cell immunity when appropriately selected immunogenic dr
291 Trib1) as a central regulator of antiviral T cell immunity, where loss of Trib1 led to a sustained en
292 endritic cells (DCs) is required to induce T cell immunity, whereas immature DCs can induce immune to
293 ccine development have focused on adaptive T cell immunity, whereas the importance of innate immune c
294 tial for the initiation of adaptive CD8(+) T cell immunity, which in turn is critical for effective c
295 onverge on NFATc1 with opposing effects on T cell immunity, which may underlie the beneficial effect
296 ic CD4(+) T-cell compartment that suppress T-cell immunity while concomitantly promoting aberrant IgG
299 ioning regulates the extent and quality of T cell immunity, with important implications for vaccine d