Cell mediated rejection.

Rejection is the major barrier to successful transplantation and usually results from the integration of multiple mechanisms. Activation of elements of the innate immune system, triggered as a consequence of tissue injury sustained during cell isolation or organ retrieval as well as ischemia-reperfu...

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Hlavní autoři: Wood, K, Zaitsu, M, Goto, R
Médium: Journal article
Jazyk:English
Vydáno: 2013
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author Wood, K
Zaitsu, M
Goto, R
author_facet Wood, K
Zaitsu, M
Goto, R
author_sort Wood, K
collection OXFORD
description Rejection is the major barrier to successful transplantation and usually results from the integration of multiple mechanisms. Activation of elements of the innate immune system, triggered as a consequence of tissue injury sustained during cell isolation or organ retrieval as well as ischemia-reperfusion, will initiate and amplify the adaptive response. For cell mediated rejection, T cells require multiple signals for activation, the minimum being two signals; antigen recognition and costimulation. The majority of B cells require help from T cells to initiate alloantibody production. Antibodies reactive to donor HLA molecules, minor histocompatibility antigens, endothelial cells, red blood cells, or autoantigens can trigger or contribute to rejection early as well as late after transplantation.
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spelling oxford-uuid:ec2b3845-73fd-4d6f-b8ef-71ba9e9e148a2022-03-27T11:15:29ZCell mediated rejection.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:ec2b3845-73fd-4d6f-b8ef-71ba9e9e148aEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2013Wood, KZaitsu, MGoto, RRejection is the major barrier to successful transplantation and usually results from the integration of multiple mechanisms. Activation of elements of the innate immune system, triggered as a consequence of tissue injury sustained during cell isolation or organ retrieval as well as ischemia-reperfusion, will initiate and amplify the adaptive response. For cell mediated rejection, T cells require multiple signals for activation, the minimum being two signals; antigen recognition and costimulation. The majority of B cells require help from T cells to initiate alloantibody production. Antibodies reactive to donor HLA molecules, minor histocompatibility antigens, endothelial cells, red blood cells, or autoantigens can trigger or contribute to rejection early as well as late after transplantation.
spellingShingle Wood, K
Zaitsu, M
Goto, R
Cell mediated rejection.
title Cell mediated rejection.
title_full Cell mediated rejection.
title_fullStr Cell mediated rejection.
title_full_unstemmed Cell mediated rejection.
title_short Cell mediated rejection.
title_sort cell mediated rejection
work_keys_str_mv AT woodk cellmediatedrejection
AT zaitsum cellmediatedrejection
AT gotor cellmediatedrejection