Resultados de búsqueda - "pathology"

  1. Pseudomonad bacterial epiphyte studies in Colorado por Legard, D.E., Schwartz, Howard F., Garrett, K.A.

    Publicado 1986
    “…Results of the research on beans carried out by the Dept. of Plant Pathology and Weed Science of Colorado State U. (USA) are briefly summarized. …”
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  2. Pathogenesis and immunobiology of brucellosis : review of brucella-host interactions por de Figueiredo, Paul, Ficht, Thomas A., Rice-Ficht, Allison C., Rossetti, Carlos Alberto, Adams, Leslie G.

    Publicado 2022
    “…Brucellae display strong tissue tropism for lymphoreticular and reproductive systems with an intracellular lifestyle that limitsn exposure to innate and adaptive immune responses, sequesters the organism from the effects of antibiotics, and drives clinical disease manifestations and pathology. Stealthy brucellae exploit strategies to establish infection, including i) evasion of intracellular destruction by restricting fusion of type IV secretion systemdependent Brucella-containing vacuoles with lysosomal compartments, ii) inhibition of apoptosis of infected mononuclear cells, and iii) prevention of dendritic cell maturation, antigen presentation, and activation of naive T cells, pathogenesis lessons that may be informative for other intracellular pathogens. …”
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  3. Genomics approaches to study the biology underlying resistance to trypanosomiasis--some unexpected lessons por Kemp, Stephen J., Hanotte, Olivier H., Agaba, Morris, Noyes, H.A., Gibson, John P., Archibald, A.L., Rennie, C., Hulme, H., Brass, A.

    Publicado 2008
    “…This builds upon quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping which identified genome regions influencing susceptibility to pathology following T. congolense infection in both cattle and mice. …”
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  4. Controlling malaria and African trypanosomiasis: The role of the mouse por Foote, S.J., Iraqi, F.A., Kemp, Stephen J.

    Publicado 2005
    “…This provides an opportunity to use the mouse to probe the mechanisms underlying resistance or susceptibility to pathology. The availability of high-density linkage maps, the genome sequence and transcriptomics tools has transformed the power of the mouse to illuminate such fundamental aspects of the host-parasite interaction.…”
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