Literature DB >> 9315108

Immaturity, ageing and oral tolerance.

N Vaz1, A M Faria, B A Verdolin, C R Carvalho.   

Abstract

Founding studies of cellular immunology emphasized that tolerance to allografts could only be achieved early in the embryonic or neonatal period, suggesting that the establishment of self-tolerance, a main event in the organization of the immune system, would necessarily take place in immature hosts. Contradicting these ideas, oral tolerance is a common, daily phenomenon, easily achieved by a physiological route in adult immunocompetent animals. Furthermore, there is solid evidence that, after the neonatal period, the susceptibility to oral tolerance induction also wanes and that it may be restored by adoptive transfer of cells from young hosts. These findings are briefly reviewed here to emphasize that immunological activity is a continuous and ongoing epigenesis extending throughout the entire life of the organism, far beyond the early phases of ontogenesis.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9315108     DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-3083.1997.d01-117.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scand J Immunol        ISSN: 0300-9475            Impact factor:   3.487


  5 in total

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Authors:  Paulo Ney Aguiar Martins; Stefan G Tullius; James F Markmann
Journal:  Int Rev Immunol       Date:  2013-10-15       Impact factor: 5.311

2.  Systemic effects of oral tolerance on inflammation: mobilization of lymphocytes and bone marrow eosinopoiesis.

Authors:  Claudiney M Rodrigues; Olindo A Martins-Filho; Nelson M Vaz; Cláudia R Carvalho
Journal:  Immunology       Date:  2006-04       Impact factor: 7.397

3.  Indirect effects of oral tolerance inhibit pulmonary granulomas to Schistosoma mansoni eggs.

Authors:  Geraldo Magela Azevedo; Raquel Alves Costa; Mariana Araujo Resende; Claudiney Melquiades Rodrigues; Nelson Monteiro Vaz; Cláudia Rocha Carvalho
Journal:  Clin Dev Immunol       Date:  2011-10-13

4.  Long-term and large-scale epidemiology of Brucella infection in baleen whales and sperm whales in the western North Pacific and Antarctic Oceans.

Authors:  Kazue Ohishi; Takeharu Bando; Erika Abe; Yasushi Kawai; Yoshihiro Fujise; Tadashi Maruyama
Journal:  J Vet Med Sci       Date:  2016-06-18       Impact factor: 1.267

5.  Reduction of human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) proviral loads in rats orally infected with HTLV-1 by reimmunization with HTLV-1-infected cells.

Authors:  Kazuya Komori; Atsuhiko Hasegawa; Kiyoshi Kurihara; Takayuki Honda; Hiroo Yokozeki; Takao Masuda; Mari Kannagi
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2006-08       Impact factor: 5.103

  5 in total

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