Dicţionar englez-român |
IMMUNE
Pronunție (USA): | (GB): |
Traducere în limba română
immune I. adjectiv
1. (med.) imun (şi fig.).
2. (from) scutit, dispensat (de); eliberat (de).
immune II. substantiv
(med.) persoană imună.
Exemple de propoziții și/sau fraze:
Specifically, the researchers found that PHD proteins promote the development of regulatory T cells, a type of T cell that suppresses the activity of other parts of the immune system.
(Oxygen can impair cancer immunotherapy in mice, NIH)
Intriguingly, the colony maintained a healthy performance for several months after treatment had finished, suggesting that it was still immune to infection – even though the original treated bees would have died off and been replaced by new generations.
(Discovery of RNA transfer through royal jelly could aid development of honey bee vaccines, University of Cambridge)
Subsequently, the Fc component of the engineered antibody targets and binds to the CD64 receptor on the dendritic cells (DCs); upon processing by DCs, the cellular immune system may be activated to induce helper T-cell and CTL immune responses against tumor cells expressing the TRP2 antigen.
(Melanoma TRP2 CTL Epitope Vaccine SCIB1, NCI Thesaurus)
Upon exposure to the tumor-associated antigens (TAA) released from dying glioma cells, which were killed by thymidine kinase-mediated valacyclovir-induced tumor cell death, the DCs initiate a specific immune response against any remaining TAA-expressing tumor cells.
(Ad-hCMV-Flt3L, NCI Thesaurus)
By discovering the molecules of the immune system with which the virus interacts and may ‘silence’ the microbicidal mechanisms of our cells, we also identified several molecules that could in the future be attacked by drugs, he explained.
(Study uncovers cause of aggressive leishmaniasis strain, SciDev.Net)
After infecting cerebral organoids with LACV, the researchers observed that the virus was more likely to kill neurons, and they also found that the immune response to the virus was weaker in those cells than in neural stem cells.
(Cerebral organoid model provides clues about how to prevent virus-induced brain cell death, National Institutes of Health)
Given their finding that PHD proteins suppress the inflammatory immune response in the lung, the researchers wondered whether inhibiting them might improve the efficacy of adoptive cell transfer, a type of immunotherapy that harnesses the ability of a patient’s own T cells to recognize and attack cancer.
(Oxygen can impair cancer immunotherapy in mice, NIH)