Publications by authors named "Maneewan Suwansaard"

Monitoring antigen-specific T cell immunity relies on functional tests that require T cells and antigen presenting cells to be uncompromised. Drawing of blood, its storage and shipment from the clinical site to the test laboratory, and the subsequent isolation, cryopreservation and thawing of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) before the actual test is performed can introduce numerous variables that may jeopardize the results. Therefore, no T cell test is valid without assessing the functional fitness of the PBMC being utilized.

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T cell immunity is traditionally assessed through functional recall assays, which detect the consequences of the T cells' antigen encounter, or via fluorescently labeled multimers that selectively bind peptide-specific T cell receptors. Using either approach, if the wrong antigen or peptide of a complex antigenic system, such as a virus, is used for immune monitoring, either false negative data will be obtained, or the magnitude of the antigen-specific T cell compartment will go largely underestimated. In this work, we show how selection of the "right" antigen or antigenic peptides is critical for successful T cell immune monitoring against human cytomegalovirus (HCMV).

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Rhodopseudomonas palustris TN1 was isolated from Songkhla Lake, Thailand. It phototrophically generates H(2) from the predominant volatile fatty acids (VFAs) produced from microbial dark-fermentations of palm oil milling effluent; yields from 20 mM butyrate, acetate and propionate were 4.7, 2.

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