13 results on '"Elisabetta Stefani"'
Search Results
2. Design and Implementation of a Multi-Modal Biometric System for Company Access Control
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Elisabetta Stefani and Carlo Ferrari
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data security ,adaptive multi-modal biometric system ,biometric identifiers ,face recognition ,iris recognition ,Industrial engineering. Management engineering ,T55.4-60.8 ,Electronic computers. Computer science ,QA75.5-76.95 - Abstract
This paper is about the design, implementation, and deployment of a multi-modal biometric system to grant access to a company structure and to internal zones in the company itself. Face and iris have been chosen as biometric traits. Face is feasible for non-intrusive checking with a minimum cooperation from the subject, while iris supports very accurate recognition procedure at a higher grade of invasivity. The recognition of the face trait is based on the Local Binary Patterns histograms, and the Daughman’s method is implemented for the analysis of the iris data. The recognition process may require either the acquisition of the user’s face only or the serial acquisition of both the user’s face and iris, depending on the confidence level of the decision with respect to the set of security levels and requirements, stated in a formal way in the Service Level Agreement at a negotiation phase. The quality of the decision depends on the setting of proper different thresholds in the decision modules for the two biometric traits. Any time the quality of the decision is not good enough, the system activates proper rules, which ask for new acquisitions (and decisions), possibly with different threshold values, resulting in a system not with a fixed and predefined behaviour, but one which complies with the actual acquisition context. Rules are formalized as deduction rules and grouped together to represent “response behaviors” according to the previous analysis. Therefore, there are different possible working flows, since the actual response of the recognition process depends on the output of the decision making modules that compose the system. Finally, the deployment phase is described, together with the results from the testing, based on the AT&T Face Database and the UBIRIS database.
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- 2017
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3. Isolation of Mycoplasma iowae in turkey flocks with skeletal abnormalities: a retrospective study
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Marco Bottinelli, Elisabetta Stefani, Mauro Dal Prà, Andrea Matucci, Katia Capello, Salvatore Catania, and Alessandro Zotti
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General Immunology and Microbiology ,040301 veterinary sciences ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Retrospective cohort study ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Mycoplasma ,Mycoplasma iowae ,Biology ,Isolation (microbiology) ,medicine.disease_cause ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Microbiology ,0403 veterinary science ,Food Animals ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Flock ,Skeletal abnormalities ,Pathogen - Abstract
Mycoplasma iowae, a pathogen affecting the turkey industry, is commonly associated with decreased hatchability and leg abnormalities in young progeny. This Mycoplasma was in the spotlight more in t...
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- 2021
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4. Isolation of
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Marco, Bottinelli, Elisabetta, Stefani, Andrea, Matucci, Mauro, Dal Prà, Katia, Capello, Alessandro, Zotti, and Salvatore, Catania
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- 2021
5. The pathogen Mycoplasma dispar Shows High Minimum Inhibitory Concentrations for Antimicrobials Commonly Used for Bovine Respiratory Disease
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Marianna Merenda, Micaela Picchi, Michele Gastaldelli, Elisabetta Stefani, Salvatore Catania, Robin A.J. Nicholas, and Marco Bottinelli
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0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Florfenicol ,antibiotic resistance ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Dispar ,Mycoplasma dispar ,Tylosin ,minimum inhibitory concentration ,Biochemistry ,Microbiology ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Minimum inhibitory concentration ,parasitic diseases ,Enrofloxacin ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Tilmicosin ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,biology ,Broth microdilution ,lcsh:RM1-950 ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,lcsh:Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,chemistry ,bovine respiratory disease ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Mycoplasma dispar is an overlooked pathogen often involved in bovine respiratory disease (BRD), which affects cattle around the world. BRD results in lost production and high treatment and prevention costs. Additionally, chronic therapies with multiple antimicrobials may lead to antimicrobial resistance. Data on antimicrobial susceptibility to M. dispar is limited so minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) of a range of antimicrobials routinely used in BRD were evaluated using a broth microdilution technique for 41 M. dispar isolates collected in Italy between 2011&ndash, 2019. While all isolates had low MIC values for florfenicol (<, 1 &mu, g/mL), many showed high MIC values for erythromycin (MIC90 &ge, 8 &mu, g/mL). Tilmicosin MIC values were higher (MIC50 = 32 &mu, g/mL) than those for tylosin (MIC50 = 0.25 &mu, g/mL). Seven isolates had high MIC values for lincomycin, tilmicosin and tylosin (&ge, 32 &mu, g/mL). More, alarmingly, results showed more than half the strains had high MICs for enrofloxacin, a member of the fluoroquinolone class considered critically important in human health. A time-dependent progressive drift of enrofloxacin MICs towards high-concentration values was observed, indicative of an on-going selection process among the isolates.
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- 2020
6. The pathogen
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Marco, Bottinelli, Marianna, Merenda, Michele, Gastaldelli, Micaela, Picchi, Elisabetta, Stefani, Robin A J, Nicholas, and Salvatore, Catania
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antibiotic resistance ,Mycoplasma dispar ,bovine respiratory disease ,minimum inhibitory concentration ,Article - Abstract
Mycoplasma dispar is an overlooked pathogen often involved in bovine respiratory disease (BRD), which affects cattle around the world. BRD results in lost production and high treatment and prevention costs. Additionally, chronic therapies with multiple antimicrobials may lead to antimicrobial resistance. Data on antimicrobial susceptibility to M. dispar is limited so minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) of a range of antimicrobials routinely used in BRD were evaluated using a broth microdilution technique for 41 M. dispar isolates collected in Italy between 2011–2019. While all isolates had low MIC values for florfenicol (
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- 2020
7. Molecular Differentiation of Mycoplasma gallisepticum Outbreaks: A Last Decade Study on Italian Farms Using GTS and MLST
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Andrea Matucci, Salvatore Catania, Gelinda De Grandi, Ilenia Rossi, Miklós Gyuranecz, Elisabetta Stefani, and Michele Gastaldelli
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0301 basic medicine ,Mycoplasma gallisepticum ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Immunology ,Biosecurity ,Population ,Context (language use) ,Biology ,Article ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,vaccine ,Drug Discovery ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Typing ,education ,Genotyping ,Pharmacology ,Genetics ,education.field_of_study ,poultry ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,Vaccination ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Multilocus sequence typing ,GTS ,MLST - Abstract
Mycoplasma gallisepticum (MG) infects many avian species and leads to significant economic losses in the poultry industry. Transmission of this pathogen occurs both horizontally and vertically, and strategies to avoid the spread of MG rely on vaccination and the application of biosecurity measures to maintain breeder groups as pathogen-free. Two live attenuated MG vaccine strains are licensed in Italy: 6/85 and ts-11. After their introduction, the implementation of adequate genotyping tools became necessary to distinguish between field and vaccine strains and to guarantee proper infection monitoring activity. In this study, 40 Italian MG isolates collected between 2010&ndash, 2019 from both vaccinated and unvaccinated farms were genotyped using gene-targeted sequencing (GTS) of the cythadesin gene mgc2 and multilocus sequence typing (MLST) based on six housekeeping genes. The discriminatory power of GTS typing ensures 6/85-like strain identification, but the technique does not allow the identification ts-11 strains, conversely, MLST differentiates both vaccine strains, describing more detailed interrelation structures. Our study describes MG genetic scenario within a mixed farming context. In conclusion, the use of adequate typing methods is essential to understand the evolutionary dynamics of MG strains in a particular area and to conduct epidemiological investigations in the avian population.
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- 2020
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8. Autologous cellular vaccine overcomes cancer immunoediting in a mouse model of myeloma
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Matteo Martini, Marta Mazzocco, Paola Zanovello, Andrea Matucci, Stefano Ugel, Silvia Dalla Santa, Silvia Sartoris, Tiziana Cestari, Vincenzo Bronte, Francesco De Sanctis, Elisabetta Stefani, Sergio Ferrari, Sara Sandri, Giovanna Ferrarini, and Antonio Rosato
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CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Male ,Cytotoxic ,T-Lymphocytes ,viruses ,Epitope ,Mice ,Cell Movement ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Immunology and Allergy ,HMGB1 Protein ,Murine ,Inbred BALB C ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Tumor ,Medicine (all) ,Vaccination ,Leukemia Virus ,Leukemia Virus, Murine ,myeloma ,Female ,Immunology ,Cancer immunoediting ,Cellular vaccines ,Myeloma ,Animals ,Antigens, Neoplasm ,Cancer Vaccines ,Cell Line, Tumor ,H-2 Antigens ,Lymph Nodes ,Lymphocyte Depletion ,Lymphocyte Subsets ,Plasmacytoma ,T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic ,Biology ,Major histocompatibility complex ,cellular vaccines ,Cell Line ,Immune system ,Antigen ,Antigens ,cancer immunoediting ,cancer immunoediting, cellular vaccines, myeloma ,fungi ,Original Articles ,Virology ,Molecular biology ,CTL ,Immunoediting ,Cell culture ,biology.protein ,Neoplasm - Abstract
In the Sp6 mouse plasmacytoma model, a whole-cell vaccination with Sp6 cells expressing de novo B7-1 (Sp6/B7) induced anatomically localized and cytotoxic T cell (CTL)-mediated protection against wild-type (WT) Sp6. Both WT Sp6 and Sp6/B7 showed down-regulated expression of MHC H-2 L(d). Increase of H-2 L(d) expression by cDNA transfection (Sp6/B7/L(d)) raised tumour immune protection and shifted most CTL responses towards H-2 L(d)-restricted antigenic epitopes. The tumour-protective responses were not specific for the H-2 L(d)-restricted immunodominant AH1 epitope of the gp70 common mouse tumour antigen, although WT Sp6 and transfectants were able to present it to specific T cells in vitro. Gp70 transcripts, absent in secondary lymphoid organs of naive mice, were detected in immunized mice as well as in splenocytes from naive mice incubated in vitro with supernatants of CTL-lysed Sp6 cell cultures, containing damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs). It has been shown that Toll-like receptor triggering induces gp70 expression. Damage-associated molecular patterns are released by CTL-mediated killing of Sp6/B7-Sp6/B7/L(d) cells migrated to draining lymph nodes during immunization and may activate gp70 expression and presentation in most resident antigen-presenting cells. The same could also apply for Mus musculus endogenous ecotropic murine leukaemia virus 1 particles present in Sp6-cytosol, discharged by dying cells and superinfecting antigen-presenting cells. The outcome of such a massive gp70 cross-presentation would probably be tolerogenic for the high-affinity AH1-gp70-specific CTL clones. In this scenario, autologous whole-tumour-cell vaccines rescue tumour-specific immunoprotection by amplification of subdominant tumour antigen responses when those against the immune dominant antigens are lost.
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- 2015
9. Evaluation of a rapid and inexpensive liquid culture system for the detection of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis in bovine faeces
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Michele Gastaldelli, Katia Capello, Caterina Dal Ben, Nicola Pozzato, Elisabetta Stefani, and Jacek Gwozdz
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Microbiology (medical) ,Time Factors ,Serial dilution ,Cattle Diseases ,Paratuberculosis ,Microbiology ,law.invention ,Feces ,law ,medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Pathogen ,Dairy cattle ,Polymerase chain reaction ,Bacteriological Techniques ,biology ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Culture Media ,Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis ,Herd ,Cattle ,Mycobacterium - Abstract
Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP) is the etiologic agent of paratuberculosis, a chronic granulomatous enteric disease of ruminants. MAP detection by faecal culture provides the definitive diagnosis of the infection. Automated liquid systems for MAP culture are more sensitive and rapid than culture on solid media, but they are expensive and require specialised equipment. In this study, a non-automated culture method using a modified Middlebrook 7H9 liquid medium (7H9+) was compared with Herrold's solid medium (HEYM) and direct real-time PCR on dairy cattle faeces. MAP growth in 7H9+ was monitored weekly by real-time PCR until the 12th week post-inoculation. The analytical sensitivity of the three methods was evaluated using faecal samples from a healthy cow spiked with ten-fold dilutions of MAP organisms (10 4 –10 − 1 ) and naturally MAP-infected faeces serially diluted 1 to 10 in negative faecal samples. The limits of detection of the solid culture and direct real-time PCR were 10 2 and 10 3 MAP/g, respectively. In comparison, the 7H9+ culture revealed as few as 1 MAP/g. A marked reduction in time to detection of the pathogen, compared with HEYM culture, was obtained. In addition, the three methods were applied to environmental faecal samples collected from a high- and a low-prevalence herd. The culture in 7H9+ showed to be the most sensitive test in the low-prevalence herd and provided faster results than HEYM. In the high-prevalence herd the three methods showed the same sensitivity and the real-time PCR had the shortest turnaround time. In conclusion, the use of 7H9+ for MAP-detection from cattle faeces maximizes diagnostic sensitivity and reduces turnaround time and, therefore, could replace culture in solid medium. Hence, we propose a two-step protocol for the assessment of MAP faecal excretion based on: 1) direct real-time PCR on all samples; and 2) inoculation of negative samples into 7H9+ and analysis after 3 and, if necessary, 6 weeks by real-time PCR.
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- 2011
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10. Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis as a template in the evaluation of automated kits for DNA extraction from bovine organs
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Riccardo Muliari, Katia Capello, Gaddo Vicenzoni, Nicola Pozzato, and Elisabetta Stefani
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Chromatography ,Serial dilution ,Physiology ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Paratuberculosis ,General Medicine ,Repeatability ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,DNA extraction ,Microbiology ,law.invention ,Real-time polymerase chain reaction ,law ,medicine ,Nucleic acid ,Polymerase chain reaction ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Molecular diagnostic tests are widely implemented in animal and human health microbiology. Efficient nucleic acid extraction methods are essential in diagnostic laboratories and automation is a valuable tool for those with high throughput activity. Nucleic acid extraction protocols present variable efficiency depending on the composition of the specimen and the chemical-physical characteristics of the target pathogen. In the present study, we compared the DNA extraction performances of four automated methods (kits I, M, P, Q) adapted on a Hamilton Robotics “Microlab Starlet” extraction unit, and one manual method (kit R). Ten-fold dilutions of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP) were used to contaminate bovine central nervous system (CNS) and lung-spleen-liver pools (LSL). In consideration of its chemical-physical characteristics, MAP was selected as a template for pathogen DNA detection. Analytical performance and repeatability were assessed through downstream real-time PCR amplification, hands-on time (HOT), total turnaround time (TAT) and costs of all kits. MAP was detected differently depending on extraction kit and type of matrix analysed. Kits M and I showed the highest analytical performance on CNS (1 MAP/ml) and LSL (10 MAP/ml), respectively. Besides analytical results, kits I and M displayed high repeatability, the same HOT, very similar TAT, and were inexpensive. In conclusions, different standardized automated systems have been established with high throughput, sensitivity and repeatability for CNS and LSL. Our results also demonstrated that is necessary to assess the effectiveness of extraction kits in matrices not previously tested to avoid the risk of unreliable diagnostic outcomes.
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- 2010
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11. Induction of an antitumour adaptive immune response elicited by tumour cells expressing de novo B7-1 mainly depends on the anatomical site of their delivery: the dose applied regulates the expansion of the response
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Andrea Matucci, Anna Pia Riviera, Maria Grazia Testi, Giuseppe Tridente, Roberto Chignola, Elisabetta Stefani, Aldo Scarpa, Tiziana Cestari, Giovanna Zanoni, G. Andrighetto, C. Guerriero, and Silvia Sartoris
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Cytotoxicity, Immunologic ,tumor ,Injections, Subcutaneous ,viruses ,Immunology ,Dose-Response Relationship, Immunologic ,CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Biology ,Transfection ,immune response ,Mice ,Immune system ,Antigen ,Cell Line, Tumor ,in vivo experiments ,Animals ,Immunology and Allergy ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Hybridomas ,Immunogenicity ,fungi ,Original Articles ,Flow Cytometry ,Acquired immune system ,Cell culture ,Injections, Intravenous ,B7-1 Antigen ,Cancer research ,Immunization ,Lymph Nodes ,Lymph ,Injections, Intraperitoneal ,Spleen ,T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic - Abstract
De novo expression of costimulatory molecules in tumours generally increases their immunogenicity, but does not always induce a protective response against the parental tumour. This issue was addressed in the mouse Sp6 hybridoma model, comparing different immunization routes (subcutaneous, intraperitoneal and intravenous) and doses (0.5 x 10(6) and 5 x 10(6) cells) of Sp6 cells expressing de novo B7-1 (Sp6/B7). The results can be summarized as follows. First, de novo expression of B7-1 rendered Sp6 immunogenic, as it significantly reduced the tumour incidence to < or =15% with all delivery routes and doses tested, whereas wild-type Sp6 was invariably tumorigenic (100% tumour incidence). Second, long-lasting protection against wild-type Sp6 was mainly achieved when immunization with Sp6/B7 was subcutaneous: a dose of 0.5 x 10(6) Sp6/B7 cells elicited protection that was confined to sites in the same anatomical quarter as the immunizing injection. Repeated injections of the same dose extended protection against wild-type Sp6 to other anatomical districts, as well as a single injection of a 10-fold higher dose (5 x 10(6) cells). Finally, Sp6-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocyte activity was detected in draining lymph nodes, and the splenic expansion of Sp6-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocyte precursors quantitatively correlated with the dose of antigen. We conclude that activation of a protective immune response against Sp6 depends on the local environment where the immunogenic form of the 'whole tumour cell antigen' is delivered. The antigen dose regulates the anatomical extent of the protective response.
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- 2003
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12. Multiplexed Typing of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis Types I, II, and III by Luminex xMAP Suspension Array
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Elisabetta Stefani, Antonia Anna Lettini, Nicola Pozzato, and Michele Gastaldelli
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Microbiology (medical) ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,biology ,Paratuberculosis ,Mycobacteriology and Aerobic Actinomycetes ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Luminex xmap ,Virology ,DNA gyrase ,Bacterial Typing Techniques ,Microbiology ,Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis ,Discriminatory power ,Suspension array technology ,Bacterial Proteins ,DNA Gyrase ,medicine ,Animals ,Typing ,Mycobacterium - Abstract
Differentiation among types I, II, and III is the primary step in typing Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis. We propose an innovative approach based on detection of gyrase B ( gyrB ) gene polymorphisms by suspension array technology, with high discriminatory power and high-throughput potential.
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- 2011
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13. Myelin basic protein epitopes secreted by human T cells encounter natural autoantibodies in the serum
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Gianni Zoccatelli, Anna Pia Riviera, G. Andrighetto, Elisabetta Stefani, Silvia Sartoris, Tiziana Cestari, Giuseppe Tridente, Roberto Chignola, and C. Guerriero
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Epitopes, T-Lymphocyte ,Monoclonal Gammopathy of Undetermined Significance ,Epitope ,Epitopes ,Antibody Specificity ,T-Lymphocyte Subsets ,Immunology and Allergy ,Innate ,MBP epitopcs ,Child ,Cells, Cultured ,Immunity, Cellular ,Cultured ,biology ,Chemistry ,Peripheral tolerance ,Neurology ,Child, Preschool ,thymocytes ,Antibody ,Multiple Sclerosis ,medicine.drug_class ,Immunoprecipitation ,Cells ,Immunology ,expression and secretion ,T lymphocytes ,natural autoantibodies ,Autoantibodies ,Binding Sites, Antibody ,Humans ,Immune Sera ,Immunity, Innate ,Immunoglobulin G ,Myelin Basic Protein ,Monoclonal antibody ,medicine ,Secretion ,Preschool ,Binding Sites ,Autoantibody ,Immunity ,Molecular biology ,Myelin basic protein ,T-Lymphocyte ,biology.protein ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cellular - Abstract
A previously isolated and characterized IgM monoclonal antibody (mAb 1H6.2) specific to myelin basic protein (MBP) and to MBP epitopes expressed by nonneural cells was used to immunoprecipitate and investigate the expression of MBP epitopes by human T cells. Peripheral T lymphocytes secreted MBP epitopes, and secretion increased in time after mitogen stimulation. Conversely, thymocytes secreted these proteins independently on mitogen stimulation. Specific antibody reactivity (primarily due to IgG3) towards immunoprecipitated MBP epitopes was found in all tested sera from healthy donors and from multiple sclerosis patients as well as in sera from normal human cord blood. Collectively, these data provide insights into the immunological mechanisms leading to central and peripheral tolerance to MBP products.
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- 2003
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