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1 , the process can be quite stressful for the donor cell.
2 ows that this reaction can take place in the donor cell.
3 techniques for distinguishing recipient from donor cells.
4 most commonly due to material transfer from donor cells.
5 promoting the proliferation of transplanted donor cells.
6 ntibodies (mAbs) bound to target antigens on donor cells.
7 LG-2-interacting protein X (ALIX) within the donor cells.
8 ete engraftment of the recipient BM with GFP donor cells.
9 mice reveals survival and engraftment of the donor cells.
10 ell chimerism or the proportion of malignant donor cells.
11 ous physiologic properties reflective of the donor cells.
12 Host cells were attracted to Wnt11 donor cells.
13 conjugative plasmid RP4 present in adjacent donor cells.
14 on and functional status of peptidases in Ag donor cells.
15 s its functional reconstitution by wild-type donor cells.
16 and severity of inflammation induced by the donor cells.
17 c mice generated with CCR2(KO) or CX3CR1(KO) donor cells.
18 cellular immune responses primed directly by donor cells.
19 levels correlated with higher percentages of donor cells.
20 mmunoglobulin G (IgG)-chelated antigens from donor cells.
21 d by intravenous transplantation of the same donor cells.
22 signaling between conjugative recipient and donor cells.
23 (Xa) and one inactive X (Xi) chromosome from donor cells.
24 be highly significant for non-heart-beating donor cells.
25 se livers permit extensive repopulation with donor cells.
26 is severely limited by the poor survival of donor cells.
27 omplexes in the form of exosomes released by donor cells.
28 ssing three fluorescent viruses were used as donor cells.
29 All patients engrafted with donor cells.
30 gnal regulatory protein alpha (SIRPalpha) on donor cells.
31 erived mesenchymal stem cells from Snuppy as donor cells.
32 ls, leading to complete spermatogenesis from donor cells.
33 is severely limited by the poor survival of donor cells.
34 shed levels of miR-29b compared with healthy donor cells.
35 patterns that differed from those in unused donor cells.
36 is severely limited by the poor survival of donor cells.
37 genotype and the phenotype conferred by the donor cells.
39 is frequently used as a marker for tracking donor cells adoptively transplanted into recipient anima
40 ipient blood and bone marrow with allogeneic donor cells after sublethal irradiation by a ~2-fold inc
41 The graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) effect of donor cells (against A20 tumor cells) was maintained or
42 eviously known to suppress self-induction of donor cells, also serves as a classic quorum-sensing sig
43 replacement of the host's immune system with donor cells, although the heterogeneity of clinical mani
44 in an increased production of mature myeloid donor cells and an increased survival of recipient mice
45 istochemistry were used to track the fate of donor cells and assess their capacity to repair osteonec
46 llular drug transfer, cytotoxicity of PTX on Donor cells and cytotoxicity of PTX-containing exosomes
48 dothelium inward, reduces surgical trauma to donor cells and facilitates spontaneous unfolding, thus
49 idine staining indicated that persistence of donor cells and formation of new myocytes were negligibl
50 AP), enabled efficient (>90%) engraftment of donor cells and full correction of a sickle-cell anemia
51 ajor histocompatibility complex haplotype of donor cells and not the differences in the expression of
52 mmary, this mouse can be used as a source of donor cells and organs in various research areas such as
53 biotic resistance between resistance-bearing donor cells and resistance-deficient recipient cells.
54 n of comparable MHC combinations between the donor cells and the graft recipient as used in human pat
56 BMP 2 or 4; however, the contribution of the donor cells and their interactions with the host cells d
57 rtance especially in the cryopreservation of donor cells and tissue, but native antifreeze proteins a
59 athways: the direct pathway (non-self HLA on donor cells) and the indirect pathway (self-restricted p
60 transplants with wild-type CD45.1 and CD45.2 donor cells, and characterised haematopoietic cell recon
62 ell transplantation, a substantial number of donor cells are lost because of apoptotic cell death.
64 changes and vascularization in tissues where donor cells are not detected, suggesting that their ther
65 elated with the density of CD47 molecules on donor cells, as CD47(+/-) DST was able to prolonged dono
66 rs on acceptor cells take up and internalize donor cell-associated immune complexes composed of speci
67 ukocyte neutrophils using anti-Ly6G inhibits donor cell astrogliosis and rescues the capacity of a do
68 smission overcame barriers introduced in the donor cell at the level of gene expression and surface r
70 -dependent cytotoxic crossmatch (CDC-XM) and donor cell-based flow cytometric crossmatch (flow-XM) bu
71 ls of transplantation, we have observed that donor cells become "cross-dressed" in very high levels o
72 ring of EVs involves the modification of the donor cell before EV isolation or direct modification of
74 scenario, subretinal transplantation places donor cells beneath an intact host outer nuclear layer (
76 tion had little effect on gene expression in donor cells, but it substantially improved transcription
77 cal mismatch between host cardiomyocytes and donor cells can directly affect the electrical safety of
79 we show that physiological tau released from donor cells can transfer to recipient cells via the medi
83 (null)) mice resulted in a limited degree of donor cell chimerism and a differentiation program skewe
87 In Transwell co-culture experiments, mutant donor cells conferred miR-100-mediated target repression
90 nd that, in hGPC-xenografted mice, the human donor cells continue to expand throughout the forebrain,
91 le tissue was transplanted into a male host, donor cells contributing to the developing testis retain
93 approximately 1 transconjugant for every 100 donor cells could be recovered from the intestine of N2
94 lantation could be a viable alternative, but donor cells currently are procured from the same sources
95 ackground, as observed with the mitochondria donor cells, cybrids with benign mitochondria showed hig
96 erapy and the exact pathway leading to acute donor cell death following transplantation is still unkn
97 humans, we sought to assess the efficacy of donor cells derived from both healthy and diabetic anima
98 rnalization and delivery of this metastatic "donor" cell-derived message provide plausible mechanisms
99 monocytes, leading to exacerbated MPN and to donor-cell-derived MPN following stem cell transplantati
100 GVHD lethality in mice that received Pdl1-/- donor cells did not affect graft-versus-leukemia respons
101 that, depending on the abundance of antigen-donor cells, different subsets of liver cells could cros
102 nced by the host environment, such that more donor cells differentiated as oligodendrocytes in the hy
103 predominantly neuronal and oligodendrocytic donor cell differentiation, and functional locomotor imp
104 nical properties as the native bone, and the donor cells directly participated in endochondral bone f
105 ated from the culture medium of drug-treated donor cells (Donor cells) using ultra-centrifugation, an
106 , adjusted for comorbidity scores, source of donor cells, donor type, patient age, disease severity,
107 y KO T cells was observed only at suboptimal donor cell doses and was greatest for CD80 KO-->F1 mice.
110 These reduced intensity regimens still allow donor cell engraftment and GVT, whilst reducing the morb
111 splanted with donor satellite cells promoted donor cell engraftment in a few instances, suggesting th
112 importance of these factors as mediators of donor cell engraftment in an in vivo model of satellite
114 icient and resulted in much higher levels of donor cell engraftment than intraperitoneal injection.
124 hyl)-nitrosourea (BCNU) treatment to enhance donor-cell engraftment and then evaluated transplant tol
125 -mice showed long-term stable and high-level donor-cell engraftment with MGMT transgenic C57BL/6 BMT
126 ed peak CD80 upregulation at day 10; CD80 KO donor cells exhibited greater peak (day 10) donor T cell
128 of allogeneic non-self, and their capture of donor cell exosomes to amplify the presentation of trans
129 upregulated in lesional skin and mononuclear donor cells exposed to recombinant mutant proteins.
130 rfaced with genetically engineered excitable donor cells expressing inward rectifier potassium (Kir2.
132 of perforin-mediated lytic mechanisms in the donor cells failed to reduce their ability to protect.
133 doptive transfer of 6-ECDCA- or CDCA-treated donor cells failed to transfer disease in naive recipien
135 s, inputting experimental cell stiffness and donor cell fluorescence values generated transfers to si
136 ach provides a potential source of universal donor cells for applications where the differentiated de
139 em cells have been envisioned as a source of donor cells for transplantation and vectors for the deli
141 efit from acute GVHD was also observed using donor cells from IFN-gammaR(-/-) T cells compared with c
144 in vivo, as demonstrated by the inability of donor cells from treated mice to cause leukemia in secon
145 tone H3 lysine 9 trimethylation (H3K9me3) of donor cell genome as a major barrier for efficient repro
149 hat flow-sorted embryonic-stage Crx-positive donor cells have the potential to replace lost cones, as
151 ring reprogramming, cells progressively lose donor cell identity and gradually acquire iPS cell prope
152 nitor iPSC-derived graft maturation, predict donor cell identity, and evaluate graft function prior t
153 ase of exosomes has an effect on the exosome donor cells in addition to the recipient cells has not b
154 pheromone system may have evolved such that donor cells in biofilms are only induced to transfer whe
155 es can be a convenient resource for tracking donor cells in both syngenic MHC-matched and in allogeni
157 The artefactual appearance of integrated donor cells in host retinas following transplantation is
158 of immune reaction between the host and the donor cells in MPS IH, gene-corrected autologous stem ce
159 rgamma)-dependent cytokine signaling only to donor cells in NSG recipients differently influenced the
160 ow (BM), in part due to the poor survival of donor cells in response to inflammatory reactions, hypox
161 It is difficult to detect engraftment of donor cells in the liver, and methods to track cells lab
162 ic flow index correlated with an increase in donor cells in the mediastinal draining lymph nodes; inc
164 ix recipients had substantial proportions of donor cells in the skin, and none had detectable anti-C7
166 tophagy level and function, similar to young donors' cells, in which spermidine biosynthesis has been
168 of recipient cells to sEVs from KRAS mutant donor cells increases proliferation and tumorigenesis an
172 ads to miR-193a accumulation in the exosomal donor cells instead of exosomes, inhibiting tumour progr
176 date the underlying mechanisms through which donor cells interact with the host and thus increase lon
177 f electrical mismatch across a cardiomyocyte-donor cell interface affects vulnerability to conduction
178 ng studies demonstrated viable implants with donor cells interspersed in the adjacent myocardium with
181 plantation of unmatched normal and malignant donor cells into zap70(y442) mutant zebrafish, with T ce
185 results show for the first time that CD47 on donor cells is required to repress recipient DC activati
186 cell transplantation (HSCT) with susceptible donor cells is sufficient to achieve sustained HIV-1 rem
187 d bone marrow chimeras and that rejection of donor cells leads to a specific antitumor response again
188 oad renal benefit achieved by relatively few donor cells led to the hypothesis that extracellular ves
190 luripotency, based on their capacity to test donor cell lineage potential in the context of an organi
191 d clinical data, HLA genotyping results, and donor cell lines or genomic DNA for 1277 patients with A
193 allogeneic HSCT with homozygous CCR5Delta32 donor cells may be sufficient to achieve HIV-1 remission
194 nd fission processes dynamically remodel the donor cell membrane in a protein- or a lipid-mediated ma
195 y effectively erase dysfunctional epigenetic donor cell memory or disease-associated aberrations in p
196 g peak numbers, around day 3, the "licensed" donor cells migrate to the circulation and initiate infl
197 or 30 d post-SCI (dpi) resulted in extensive donor cell migration, predominantly neuronal and oligode
198 the persistence of transfused semiallogeneic donor cells mismatched at major histocompatibility class
199 d in localized astroglial differentiation of donor cells near the lesion epicenter and failure to pro
200 eviously reported, because it was found that donor cells older than P11 effectively integrated into a
201 Specific barriers, either located in the donor cell or in the target cell, prevent efficient spre
203 ult or pre-weaned donor mice, male or female donor cells, or between male and female host muscle envi
205 the host was lower than that of mouse or rat donor cells, our results indicate that hNCCs, injected i
209 this study, we show that CD47 expression on donor cells plays an important role in suppression of al
210 triggered massive CAR-T expansion, increased donor cell polyfunctionality, and enhanced antitumor eff
212 l astrogliosis and rescues the capacity of a donor cell population to promote locomotor improvement a
213 functional repair derived from a therapeutic donor cell population, and support targeting the inflamm
215 promise, the presumed mechanism of action of donor cell populations often remains insufficiently vali
217 ication vary significantly between different donor cell preparations and frequently decline in a mann
220 ming efficiencies using genetically modified donor cells, prospectively isolating distinct reprogramm
223 ay CD8 T cells that recognize alloantigen on donor cells require CD4 help for activation and cytolyti
225 r source and chromosome painting of labelled donor cells revealed transdifferentiation to a myocyte f
226 on of CXCR3 on cells, the depletion of CXCR3 donor cells significantly reduced the number of adoptive
227 tes are transient and bridge the gap between donor cell silencing and pluripotency marker acquisition
235 Analysis of PB grafts did not identify a donor cell subset significantly associated with OS, rela
236 ecific antibody bound to HLA antigens on the donor cell surface in their native conformation that is
237 was applied with the use of (123)I to follow donor cell survival and distribution and with the use of
238 sected by live-cell imaging into four steps: donor cell-target cell contact, formation of viral punct
240 nologies, the race to create 'off-the-shelf' donor cells that are invisible to the immune system ('un
241 demonstrate that it is the nonhematopoietic donor cells that are responsible for the reconstitution.
242 ransiently restored by physical contact with donor cells that encode the corresponding wild-type prot
243 a previously active transcriptional state in donor cells that is characterized by high H3K4 methylati
244 overed a molecular mechanism operating in Ag donor cells that regulates cross-priming of CD8+ T cells
245 d OVA-loaded beta(2)-microglobulin knockout "donor" cells that cannot present Ag, DCs from stressed m
246 ing of prion-like protein aggregates from a "donor cell" that is the source of misfolded aggregates t
249 TDL are a feasible, tolerable, and novel donor cell therapy alternative for relapse after AlloSCT
250 in solid tumors by directly vaccine-boosting donor cells through their chimeric receptor in vivo.
251 efficiently transferred via exosomes from a donor cell to an alphavbeta6-negative recipient cell and
253 echanisms underlying the contribution of the donor cells to bone health are poorly understood and req
255 s can yield electric coupling of unexcitable donor cells to host cardiomyocytes with functional conse
256 e produced by recipient cells is detected by donor cells to induce conjugative genetic transfer.
258 cipient animals improved the contribution of donor cells to regenerating muscle after transplant.
262 HC mismatch, and could be induced by various donor cell types including B cells, T cells, or NK cells
266 or Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) such as shortage of donor cells, use of immunosuppressive drugs remain as ma
268 culture medium of drug-treated donor cells (Donor cells) using ultra-centrifugation, and analyzed fo
269 ermined that intravascular administration of donor cells via intracardiac injection was far more effi
270 ing donors offer opportunities for improving donor cell viability, which will advance the utility of
271 contrast to previous reports, the age of the donor cell was not as critical as previously reported, b
276 he deletion was initiated, a second graft of donor cells was used to assess a hyperacute response.
277 ing sustained pseudoautocrine stimulation to donor cells, we elicited marked enhancements in tumor el
278 fection or transfection of class II-negative donor cells, we observed minimal transfer of a proteasom
280 ugation in populations of plasmid-containing donor cells were both observed in biofilms, consistent w
282 g high levels of IL-9; and 5) IL-9-producing donor cells were detected in the blood of Th9 recipients
283 ance in cell transplantation assays in which donor cells were engrafted into host mdx limb muscle.
284 himaeras, in chicken mixed-sex chimaeras the donor cells were excluded from the functional structures
285 ipient CD154+TcM induced by stimulation with donor cells were expressed as a fraction of those induce
286 ed C7 deposition and a sustained presence of donor cells were found in the skin of children with rece
287 acerbated pulmonary fibrosis, but not if the donor cells were made AREG deficient prior to transfer.
290 ll chimerism and the proportion of malignant donor cells were significantly reduced in immunodeficien
291 ber and of changes in gene expression by the donor cells were similar in lung, spleen, and other test
294 requires the TraAB proteins in recipient and donor cells, where they are hypothesized to facilitate O
295 y of somatic mutations present in individual donor cells, which are missed by bulk sequencing methods
296 s withdraw amino acids from the cytoplasm of donor cells, which delays feedback inhibition of the cor
297 the undefined phenotypic distribution of the donor cells, which has three principle drawbacks: (1) St
298 ifferentiation along lineages related to the donor cell, while restricting alternative cell fates.
299 -like behaviour in the pheromone response of donor cells with a delayed, but increased response to th