Publications by authors named "Tudor Cristea"

Adequate responses by our innate immune system toward invading pathogens were of vital importance for surviving infections, especially before the antibiotic era. Recently, a polymorphism in Mal (Ser180Leu, TIRAP rs8177374), an important adaptor protein downstream of the Toll-like receptor (TLR) 2 and 4 pathways, has been described to provide protection against a broad range of infectious pathogens. We assessed the functional effects of this polymorphism in human experimental endotoxemia, and we demonstrate that individuals bearing the TIRAP 180L allele display an increased, innate immune response to TLR4 and TLR2 ligands, but not to TLR9 stimulation.

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Between 2004 and 2006, 50 radical prostatectomies were performed in our department, 46 of them through a laparoscopic approach addressed to early stage cancer (T1a,b,c and T2a,b,c N0 M0). We present the case of a 63 year old patient, who was initially diagnosed with prostate cancer in T1bN0M0 stage, Gleason score 8 and later presented atypical hepatic and trocar site metastases. This particular evolution of the case can be explained by the high value of the Gleason score and by the extension into microvessels observed on the sample prelevated by prostatectomy.

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Infectious diseases exert a constant evolutionary pressure on the genetic makeup of our innate immune system. Polymorphisms in Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) have been related to susceptibility to Gram-negative infections and septic shock. Here we show that two polymorphisms of TLR4, Asp299Gly and Thr399Ile, have unique distributions in populations from Africa, Asia, and Europe.

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