Background Context: Chemonucleolysis has been proposed as a less invasive technique than surgery for patients with lumbar disc herniation. Once chymopapain had been approved as a chemonucleolysis drug, it was withdrawn because of serious complications. A novel agent with fewer complications would be desirable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA WHO position paper states that allergen immunotherapy is an effective treatment for allergic diseases, and well characterized allergens should be used in immunotherapy. The house dust mite is a major cause of allergic disease. However, the biological activity of the mite extracts currently used cannot be clearly determined, since these extracts contain various impurities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHyposensitization, in which causative antigens of allergic diseases are injected, is the sole means of a radical cure for allergic diseases. Since the therapeutic allergens currently used are naturally extracted, producing preparations with a stable titer from such extracts is extremely difficult. There are several reports on the expression of recombinant mite allergens in Escherichia coli using inducers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn antibody response capable of neutralizing not only homologous but also heterologous forms of the CXCR4-tropic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) MNp and CCR5-tropic primary isolate HIV-1 JR-CSF was achieved through sequential immunization with a combination of synthetic peptides representing HIV-1 Env V3 sequences from field and laboratory HIV-1 clade B isolates. In contrast, repeated immunization with a single V3 peptide generated antibodies that neutralized only type-specific laboratory-adapted homologous viruses. To determine whether the cross-neutralization response could be attributed to a cross-reactive antibody in the immunized animals, we isolated a monoclonal antibody, C25, which neutralized the heterologous primary viruses of HIV-1 clade B.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study presents a novel method for the production and purification of annexin V using cation exchange chromatography in the presence of calcium ions at neutral or alkaline pH. This method enables the handling of a large quantity of sample at one time without deterioration of the adsorption capacity of the cation exchange carrier by contaminating proteins, as well as the production of the calcium ion-binding protein annexin V with high purity on an industrial scale from both recombinant products and native products.
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