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 iruses bearing homologues of self peptides ("molecular mimicry").
2 s that are weakly reactive to self-antigens (molecular mimicry).
3 crossreactivity can occur in the absence of molecular mimicry.
4 ct with self-peptides, a phenomenon known as molecular mimicry.
5 lation) act to limit autoimmune disease from molecular mimicry.
6 ctivation of autoimmune T cells may occur by molecular mimicry.
7 proving the occurrence of infection-induced molecular mimicry.
8 miting the risk of autoimmune disease due to molecular mimicry.
9 D.radiodurans revealed striking examples of molecular mimicry.
10 a second characteristic of these systems of molecular mimicry.
11 self-reactive lymphocytes via the process of molecular mimicry.
12 crobial epitopes, consistent with neoantigen molecular mimicry.
13 multiple sclerosis (MS) potentially through molecular mimicry.
14 couples infection with autoimmune disease is molecular mimicry.
15 result of a virus infection, in part through molecular mimicry.
16 of viruses in the genesis of autoimmunity is molecular mimicry.
17 yptic self-epitopes, antigen persistence and molecular mimicry.
18 stigations are centered on the hypothesis of molecular mimicry.
19 cur by either bystander T-cell activation or molecular mimicry.
20 established trigger of the disease, suggests molecular mimicry.
21 s may provide antimicrobial activity against molecular mimicry.
22 tabolites and evade host immunity via glycan molecular mimicry.
23 P3 protein-protein interaction (PPI) through molecular mimicry.
24 a potential source of autoreactivity through molecular mimicry.
25 ing pathogens subvert this mechanism through molecular mimicry.
26 n-I (beta2GPI) and thus can induce antiCl by molecular mimicry.
27 vestigate glycan-mediated immune evasion via molecular mimicry.
28 g that their initial priming could occur via molecular mimicry.
29 t Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling through molecular mimicry.
30 s possible triggering factors of ITP through molecular mimicry.
31 en it and self-AQP4 was observed, supporting molecular mimicry.
32 ed mechanisms with the most postulated being molecular mimicry.
33 uned structural instability and coupled with molecular mimicry.
34 tability changed in a manner consistent with molecular mimicry.
35 main, which may represent an unusual form of molecular mimicry.
36 tochondrial Ag or a similar breakdown due to molecular mimicry.
40 e potential of virus-induced autoimmunity by molecular mimicry, a nonpathogenic neurotropic Theiler's
41 g a host inhibitory receptor via sialoglycan molecular mimicry, a novel mechanism of bacterial immune
43 individuals with type 2 disease may reflect molecular mimicries and cross-reacting autoantibodies.
45 hat r(UNCG) and r(GNRA) hairpin families use molecular mimicry and electrostatic factors to attain ex
47 icrobial proteins as possible substrates for molecular mimicry and for the identification of possible
48 protein A49 inhibits NF-kappaB activation by molecular mimicry and has a motif near the N terminus th
50 iation of autoimmunity by mechanisms such as molecular mimicry and more toward activation of an intri
53 rgues against ZnT8 autoimmunity arising from molecular mimicry and suggests a mechanistic link betwee
54 lar to pathogen antigens in order to exploit molecular mimicry and tumor pathogen cross-reactive T ce
55 elopment of autoimmunity, which are based on molecular mimicry and/or the bystander effect, and sugge
57 ms include abnormal microbial translocation, molecular mimicry, and dysregulation of both local and s
58 s involved in immunogenicity, pathogenicity, molecular mimicry, and immune evasion, expanding our und
59 buted to its high binding affinity, receptor molecular mimicry, and interactions with RBM backbone at
60 itope spread or drift, the bystander effect, molecular mimicry, anti-idiotype theory, antigenic compl
61 er than viral antigen recognition, and hence molecular mimicry, are at play and are sufficient to cau
63 tating the Esc1-Sir4 interaction and suggest molecular mimicry as a general mechanism that enables mo
64 (LOSs) of GBS-inducing microbes, suggesting molecular mimicry as a mechanism for disease induction.
66 induces protective CD8+ T cells, identifying molecular mimicry as a mechanism to enforce tolerance in
67 afficking pathway, suggests the co-option of molecular mimicry as a strategy for achieving its functi
70 dimers formed by risk haplotypes, supporting molecular mimicry as the key mechanism of RHD pathogenes
71 cross-reactive T-cell recognition, known as molecular mimicry, as well as bystander T-cell activatio
73 possibly via triggering autoimmunity through molecular mimicry, autoantigenic presentation or immune
75 These data demonstrate the importance of molecular mimicry between an infecting agent and hnRNP-A
77 l autoimmunity in human lupus arises through molecular mimicry between EBNA-1 and lupus autoantigens
79 he presence of cross-reactive antibodies and molecular mimicry between EBNA1 and GlialCAM, and accomp
82 enesis of most human autoimmune diseases and molecular mimicry between foreign and self ligands has b
83 s that probably reflect referral biases, and molecular mimicry between foreign and self-antigens is t
84 is unknown, but autoimmunity resulting from molecular mimicry between gliadin and nervous system pro
85 remains speculative, but the possibility of molecular mimicry between glycosylated flagellin and euk
87 Our results do not support the existence of molecular mimicry between HCRT and pHA(273-287) or NP(17
91 r evidence linking HPV and TED, highlighting molecular mimicry between HPV capsid protein and key aut
93 sis of RHVD and Spyogenes proteomes revealed molecular mimicry between human type 1 collagen epitope
96 primed immune cells, and autoimmunity due to molecular mimicry between pathogen and host proteins.
98 ion crystal structure of the complex reveals molecular mimicry between the aptamer and the 5'-triphos
99 arditis, may be autoimmunity mediated due to molecular mimicry between the bacterium Borrelia burgdor
103 or development of myocarditis are not clear, molecular mimicry between the spike protein of severe ac
106 ity between TMEV and self epitopes (that is, molecular mimicry), but because of de novo priming of se
107 stinct strains of S. pneumoniae that utilize molecular mimicry, but that microarray platforms populat
108 tudy, we have identified the use of bivalent molecular mimicry by ADP, coopting the 5'-deoxyadenosine
109 , as well as substantiating evidence for the molecular mimicry by beta-lactam antibiotics of the pept
112 coding TMEV serves as an excellent model for molecular mimicry by inducing pathologic myelin-specific
114 ion of an essential host phosphatase through molecular mimicry by pathogens and diversification promo
115 xtracellular matrix, we investigated whether molecular mimicry by the GAS hyaluronic acid capsule mig
117 Overall, these findings help clarify how molecular mimicry can drive self/nonself cross-reactivit
118 th preceding Campylobacter jejuni infection, molecular mimicry causes a cross-reactive antibody respo
120 -antigens during inflammatory responses, and molecular mimicry contribute to the initiation of autoan
121 A humoral immune response predicated on molecular mimicry could explain persistent or ongoing ne
122 an pain signaling, and provide an example of molecular mimicry driven by defensive selection pressure
123 ch dysbiosis might trigger arthritis include molecular mimicry, dysregulation of mucosal immunity, mi
124 haring antigenic epitopes with CNS antigens (molecular mimicry) elicits a virus-specific immune respo
125 ell responses, humoral fine specificity, and molecular mimicry evidence for differences between syste
126 d the need for regulatory devices to prevent molecular mimicry from progressing to autoimmune disease
138 lines of evidence also failed to support the molecular mimicry hypothesis, such as the failure to aff
140 me may influence the development of uveitis: molecular mimicry, imbalance of regulatory and effector
142 he literature on the concept and evidence of molecular mimicry in cancer is reviewed, covering the wh
144 The data provide a mechanistic framework for molecular mimicry in Graves' disease, where early precur
146 ism underpinning cross-kingdom signaling and molecular mimicry in mutualistic plant-microbe interacti
150 two molecules and raises the possibility of molecular mimicry in the pathogenesis of Graves' disease
151 indings substantiate the hypothesis of viral molecular mimicry in the pathogenesis of MS and warrant
153 of the function of the immune response and 'molecular mimicry' in the CB-3-induced autoimmune myocar
156 complete Freund's adjuvant, indicating that molecular mimicry-induced disease initiation requires vi
157 trains in patients with SSc, and evidence of molecular mimicry inducing autoimmune responses suggest
166 These findings also suggest that bacterial molecular mimicry is not involved in initiating disease.
167 ther autoimmune diseases, microbial mediated molecular mimicry is the most widely studied trigger tha
170 Mimicry of host protein structures, or 'molecular mimicry', is a common mechanism employed by vi
171 study represents the first example of direct molecular mimicry leading to clinically relevant fatal t
172 he immunogenicity of a synthetic peptide via molecular mimicry, leading to the inadvertent activation
173 GBS evolved to display CPS Sia as a form of molecular mimicry limiting the activation of an effectiv
174 Toward deciphering the structural basis of molecular mimicry, mAb 2D10 was isolated from a maturing
177 Our finding also supports the thesis that molecular mimicry may be implicated in the initiation of
181 In this review, we consider how butyrate molecular mimicry may play out in the setting of mucosal
184 findings contribute to the tracing of novel molecular mimicry mechanisms employed by pathogenic viru
185 ase antibody and RRV proteins indicates that molecular mimicry might activate humoral autoimmunity in
191 Tyr residues to binding as well as striking molecular mimicry of a maltose-binding protein substrate
194 effector of Legionella pneumophila exhibits molecular mimicry of eukaryotic F-box proteins and is es
197 receptors evolved as a response to pathogen molecular mimicry of host ligands for inhibitory recepto
200 tive immunization strategy that exploits the molecular mimicry of HS to generate antibodies against H
202 ty, including EBV nuclear antigen 1-mediated molecular mimicry of human autoantigens; EBV-mediated B
207 gs shed light on the structural basis of the molecular mimicry of the chemokine function by a pathoge
211 inds with subnanomolar affinity to EphA2 via molecular mimicry of the receptor's cellular ligands, ep
212 e S. flexneri utilizes a remarkable level of molecular mimicry of the talin-vinculin interaction to a
215 of TCR 11A5, providing proof of concept that molecular mimicry of viral and self-epitopes can drive T
216 e proteins likely associated with microbial "molecular mimicry" of host characteristics and involved
217 P evolved independently to converge, through molecular mimicry, on a common helicase-opening mechanis
220 cination, pointing towards processes such as molecular mimicry or bystander activation as crucial for
221 tion of hypocretin producing neurons include molecular mimicry or bystander activation, and are likel
223 These observations suggest that although molecular mimicry plays a pivotal role in initially trig
224 unodominant epitope of tax and suggests that molecular mimicry plays a role in the pathogenesis of HA
225 for advancing our understanding of the role molecular mimicry plays in the induction of autoimmunity
226 he role that mycoplasma adhesins may play in molecular mimicry, postinfectious autoimmunity, and immu
230 complex, our study unravels a sophisticated molecular mimicry strategy that is used by L. pneumophil
231 ted by distinct immune components, including molecular mimicry, T-cell receptor affinity, and, import
232 cts of autoimmunity: the mechanism of T cell molecular mimicry; T-->B epitope spreading, as a basis f
233 of supramolecular complexes, and the use of molecular mimicry, target host transcription factors tha
234 cious "pseudonormal" phenotype, may enable a molecular mimicry that allows metastasizing tumor cells
240 ella flexneri and Listeria monocytogenes use molecular mimicry to create their own actin-based motors
241 neumoniae disables neutrophils by exploiting molecular mimicry to degrade platelet-activating factor
244 ype 1 diabetes but do not support a role for molecular mimicry to insulin in the pathogenesis of this
246 obacteria, small non-coding RNAs (sRNAs) use molecular mimicry to sequester multiple CsrA dimers away
248 e historic background of clonal deletion and molecular mimicry, two major pillars underlying our pres
249 distinct bacterial peptides demonstrate that molecular mimicry underpins cross-reactivity toward the
250 Ternary structures showed that induced-fit molecular mimicry underpins TRAV27/TRBV19(+)TCR specific
252 immune dysregulation, chronic inflammation, molecular mimicry, viral persistence and emerging therap
253 es revealed that in a two-antibody cocktail, molecular mimicry was a major feature of mAb-GP interact
255 y processes underlying the phenomenon of Sia molecular mimicry, we performed phylogenomic analyses of
259 immunity can in many cases be attributed to "molecular mimicry", where linear peptide epitopes, proce
260 gger lupus through structural and functional molecular mimicry, whereas the accumulation of ERV-deriv
261 isation in the immune system, based on viral molecular mimicry, whereby immune cells attack the self,
262 host protein-derived antigens in the CNS via molecular mimicry, whereupon they produce high levels of
263 S1 can induce Plg cross-reactive Abs through molecular mimicry, which can enhance Plg activation and
264 , B cells may trigger autoimmune disease via molecular mimicry, which occurs when a single B-cell rec
265 where immune reactivity toward EBNA1 through molecular mimicry with ANO2 contributes to the etiopatho
266 The etiology of PBC is unknown, although molecular mimicry with bacterial PDC has been proposed.
268 icry with common SLE antigens and functional molecular mimicry with critical immune-regulatory compon
269 ell responses, humoral fine specificity, and molecular mimicry with EBV, further supporting potential
271 identify a functional epitope that displays molecular mimicry with human erythropoietin (EPO) and pr
273 al foreign antigen for anti-Ro autoimmunity, molecular mimicry with regard to La and CCHB, as well as
274 re of one such cationic molecule suggested a molecular mimicry with spermine, a ubiquitous endogenous
276 m viral and bacterial microorganisms showing molecular mimicry with tumour-cell-expressed antigens wa