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1 pneumonia virus of mice, a property known as heterologous immunity.
2 e is epidemiological proof that these impair heterologous immunity.
3 rity of transplant recipients as a result of heterologous immunity.
4 hogenesis of infection by a process known as heterologous immunity.
5 itope cross-reactivity likely contributes to heterologous immunity.
6 rms of beneficial and detrimental effects of heterologous immunity.
7 the memory pool in patterns consistent with heterologous immunity.
8 /beta TCRs for broad antiviral responses and heterologous immunity.
9 uence disease outcome through the process of heterologous immunity.
10 Because B cells have been shown to promote heterologous immunity against respiratory virus pathogen
14 rtoires is brought about under conditions of heterologous immunity and might have important consequen
15 s are dispensable for Lactobacillus-mediated heterologous immunity and were not crucial for promoting
18 y therefore demonstrates CD4 T-cell-mediated heterologous immunity between a bacterium and virus.
21 the development of allosensitization through heterologous immunity, but the relationship between BK v
22 ings have direct implications for allogeneic heterologous immunity by demonstrating that despite a lo
23 pe (GLCTLVAML), that, under some conditions, heterologous immunity can lead to a significant broadeni
29 blockade could surmount the barrier posed by heterologous immunity in a fully allogeneic murine trans
33 olism, viral reactivation or infections, and heterologous immunity influence SCAR development and cli
35 -induced immunopathology under conditions of heterologous immunity is a function of the private speci
40 vidence suggests that some antibody-mediated heterologous immunity may be afforded by alphavirus infe
44 ties of T-cell responses under conditions of heterologous immunity occur and have been linked to the
45 For the first time, our results illustrate heterologous immunity of virus-infected animals toward a
47 onstrated that homeostatic proliferation and heterologous immunity represent two naturally occurring
49 iral infection can lead to rejection through heterologous immunity to donor antigen directly mediated
51 ften express functional cross-reactivity, or heterologous immunity, to other viruses and to allogenei
52 tivity with other antigens and play roles in heterologous immunity upon encounter with another pathog
53 A potent role for memory CD8+ T cells in heterologous immunity was shown with a respiratory mucos
55 -immune C57BL/6J mice through the process of heterologous immunity, we questioned whether TNF was req
56 function, which is particularly important in heterologous immunity, when microbe-specific T cells cro
57 mory T cells are generated by the process of heterologous immunity, whereby memory T cells arising in
58 also find some evidence that the preexisting heterologous immunity which reduced attack rates in adul