Publications by authors named "P Slanina"

Article Synopsis
  • Previous research indicates that the intracellular complement system, particularly the molecule CD46, plays a role in regulating the Th1 immune response which produces IFN-γ and can shift to a regulatory response marked by IL-10 in some autoimmune diseases, influenced by calcitriol (vitamin D).
  • The study aimed to investigate if calcitriol affects the CD46-driven Th1 response in patients with allergic eosinophilic asthma (AEA), focusing on its potential to reduce inflammation.
  • Results showed that CD4 T cells from AEA patients had higher CD46 expression, which varied with pollen exposure; calcitriol treatments promoted the development of regulatory Tr1 cells and significantly reduced IFN-γ while increasing IL-10 production,
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Common variable immunodeficiency disorder (CVID) is the most common form of primary antibody immunodeficiency. Due to low antibody levels, CVID patients receive intravenous or subcutaneous immunoglobulin replacement therapy as treatment. CVID is associated with the chronic activation of granulocytes, including an increased percentage of low-density neutrophils (LDNs).

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Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is a rare genetic disorder with variable expressivity even in carriers of the same underlying genetic defect, suggesting other genetic and epigenetic factors participate in modifying HAE severity. Recent knowledge indicates the role of immune cells in several aspects of HAE pathogenesis, which makes monocytes and macrophages candidates to mediate these effects. Here we combined a search for HAE phenotype modifying gene variants with the characterization of selected genes' mRNA levels in monocyte and macrophages in a symptom-free period.

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Background: RTX, an anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody, added to chemotherapy has proven to be effective in children and adolescents with high-grade, high-risk and matured non-Hodgkin lymphoma. RTX leads to prompt CD19+ B lymphocyte depletion. However, despite preserved immunoglobulin production by long-lived plasmablasts after treatment, patients remain at risk of prolonged hypogammaglobulinemia.

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Background: The PLAUR gene encodes the urokinase-like plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) and may undergo alternative splicing. Excluding cassette exons 3, 5 and 6 from the transcript results in truncated protein variants whose precise functions have not been elucidated yet. The PLAUR gene is one of several expressed in myeloid cells, where uPAR participates in different cellular processes, including the contact activation system and kallikrein-kinin system, which play an important role in hereditary angioedema (HAE) pathogenesis.

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