53 results match your criteria: "Bland-Sutton Institute[Affiliation]"

Antigen presentation, antigen-presenting cells and antigen processing.

Curr Opin Immunol

December 1988

Histopathology Department, Bland-Sutton Institute, University College and Middlesex School of Medicine, London, UK.

To summarize, during the period under review there have been considerable advances in our understanding of how antigen is associated with MHC on the surface of a presenting cell. Basic rules which govern this association have been confirmed as including both the nature and the configuration of the antigen. Although the different processing pathways which generate the antigen-MHC complex have remained ill-defined, it is now much more clear what the optimum end point of such processing must be.

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Vasitis nodosa and associated clinical findings.

J Clin Pathol

April 1988

Bland-Sutton Institute of Pathology, University College, London.

To establish the prevalence of vasitis nodosa in patients who had undergone vasectomy segments of vas deferens resected from 40 patients at the time of vasectomy reversal were examined histologically and immunohistochemically. The findings were correlated with clinical history and postoperative outcome. Controls comprised segments of normal vas deferens excised at vasectomy.

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We describe the use of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5HT) as an adjuvant in the induction of the delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) response to purified protein derivative (PPD). Based upon our previous studies with antigen-pulsed macrophages (M phi), we have shown that both the Day 2 early (2 hr) reaction and the Day 3 (24 hr) reaction are augmented if 5HT is incorporated into the priming injection. Furthermore, we have confirmed that in contrast to M phi, antigen-pulsed dendritic cells (DC) fail to prime the early (2 hr) component of DTH.

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We confirm here previous studies that have shown synergy between anti-CD3 and phorbol esters in the induction of T-cell proliferation. However, for this study we have used tonsillar rather than peripheral blood T cells, and have compared the role of different phorbol esters rather than different anti-CD3 antibodies in the activation process. Three phorbol esters (phorbol myristate acetate, -dibenzoate and -didecanoate) showed a synergistic relationship.

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Interaction of lipoproteins with the artery wall.

Drugs

September 1989

Bland-Sutton Institute of Pathology, University College, London, United Kingdom.

Atherosclerosis can be defined in terms of the processes involved rather than in morphological terms, and there is evidence for possible roles of the macrophage in atherogenesis. The relevance of hyperlipidaemia to the morphogenesis of the atherosclerotic plaque is important, and this has been described in animal models including a strain of rabbit with a genetically determined hyperlipidaemia resembling familial combined hyperlipidaemia. Treatment of these animals with the HMG CoA reductase inhibitor lovastatin from the time of weaning results in a significant degree of inhibition of lesion formation.

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The incidence of appendicitis shows a marked variation between populations which has been attributed to dietary differences. Neural mechanisms and serotonin discharge from subepithelial neurosecretory cells have been previously implicated in pain referable to the appendix and appendicitis. Forty consecutive appendicectomy specimens from Malawi were studied by staining with haematoxylin and eosin, an alcian blue - PAS diastase sequence coupled with lead haematoxylin (PbH) and immunohistology for serotonin and NSE.

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The pathology of atherosclerosis with particular reference to the effects of hyperlipidaemia.

Eur Heart J

August 1987

Bland-Sutton Institute of Pathology, Joint Department of Histopathology, Middlesex Hospital Medical School, U.K.

A brief description has been given of the major processes involved in the genesis of atherosclerosis, and of the morphological features of fatty streaks, gelatinous elevations and fibrolipid plaques. The effects of hyperlipidaemia, genetically and dietarily determined, are described, with special reference to the possible role of macrophages in the development of arterial lesions caused by such hyperlipidaemias. The administration of a competitive inhibitor of HMG-CoA reductase (lovastatin) to genetically hyperlipidaemic rabbits markedly reduced the extent of intimal surface involvement by lipid-rich lesions.

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Dendritic cells have been isolated from human tonsillar tissue and shown to act as accessory cells in a mitogenic response. The dendritic cells will induced receptors for the active metabolite of vitamin D3, 1,25(OH)2D3, in the responder E+ T cells. The dendritic cells themselves constitutively express receptors for the metabolite, and this distinguishes them from other non-T cells in lymphomedullary tissue.

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There is need to re-appraise the cellular response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Histological analysis of 54 untreated patients with established disease demonstrated a continuous spectrum of tissue responses in which six groups correlated with evidence of resistance to bacterial multiplication. A predominance of cases in the two middle groups (82%) signified an immunological equilibrium in middle grade resistant patients that is absent in related diseases such as leprosy and cutaneous leishmaniasis.

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Ammonia production by pathogenic bacteria.

Biochem J

July 1940

The Department of Bacterial Chemistry (Medical Research Council), Bland-Sutton Institute of Pathology, and from the Courtauld Institute of Biochemistry, Middlesex Hospital, London, W. 1.

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The specificity of glutamine for growth of Streptococcus haemolyticus).

Biochem J

December 1939

The Department of Bacterial Chemistry (Medical Research Council), Bland Sutton Institute of Pathology, Middlesex Hospital, and from the Courtauld Institute of Biochemistry, Middlesex Hospital, London, W. 1.

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Glutamine and the growth of Streptococcus haemolyticus.

Biochem J

February 1939

The Department of Bacterial Chemistry (Medical Research Council), Bland-Sutton Institute, The Middlesex Hospital, London, W. 1.

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Preparation of alpha-amino-acids through alpha-oximino-esters.

Biochem J

January 1939

The Department of Bacterial Chemistry (Medical Research Council), Bland-Sutton Institute, Middlesex Hospital, London, W. 1.

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The production of indole by suspensions of Bact. coli.

Biochem J

September 1938

The Department of Bacterial Chemistry (Medical Research Council) Bland-Sutton Institute, Middlesex Hospital, W. 1.

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The specificity of aneurin and nicotinamide in the growth of Staph. aureus.

Biochem J

July 1938

The Department of Bacterial Chemistry (Medical Research Council), the Bland-Sutton Institute of Pathology, Middlesex Hospital, London, W. 1.

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The nutrition of Staphylococcus aureus; nicotinic acid and vitamin B(1).

Biochem J

May 1937

The Department of Bacterial Chemistry (Medical Research Council), Bland-Sutton Institute of Pathology, Middlesex Hospital, W. 1.

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The nutrition of Staphylococcus aureus. Necessity for uracil in anaerobic growth.

Biochem J

December 1936

The Department of Bacterial Chemistry (Medical Research Council), Bland-Sutton Institute, Middlesex Hospital, London.

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A filter of pyrex glass and stainless steel for use with Seitz filter-pads.

Biochem J

July 1936

The Department of Bacterial Chemistry (Medical Research Council), Bland-Sutton Institute, Middlesex Hospital, W. 1.

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The Concentration of Diastase in the Urine throughout the Day.

Biochem J

June 2006

The Biochemical Department, Bland-Sutton Institute of Pathology, Middlesex Hospital, London.

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Observations upon the Preparation and Standardisation of the Ovarian Hormone.

Biochem J

June 2006

The Biochemical Department, Bland-Sutton Institute of Pathology, and the Physiological Department, Middlesex Hospital, London.

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The Occurrence of Diastase in the Cerebro-spinal Fluid.

Biochem J

June 2006

The Biochemical Department, Bland-Sutton Institute of Pathology, Middlesex Hospital, London.

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