3 results match your criteria: "The University of Seville Medical School[Affiliation]"

The mechanisms leading to drug allergy in predisposed patients, especially those related to T-cell-mediated drug hypersensitivity, are not well understood. A key event in allergic reactions to drugs is the maturation process undergone by dendritic cells (DCs). Although amoxicillin (AX) has been reported to interact and maturate DCs from patients with AX-induced delayed-type hypersensitivity, the cell signaling pathways related to AX-mediated DC maturation have not been elucidated.

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Vasoactive Intestinal Peptide (VIP) Nanoparticles for Diagnostics and for Controlled and Targeted Drug Delivery.

Adv Protein Chem Struct Biol

July 2016

CABIMER-Andalusian Center for Molecular Biology and Regenerative Medicine (CSIC-University of Seville-UPO), Seville, Spain; Department of Medical Biochemistry, Molecular Biology and Immunology, The University of Seville Medical School, Seville, Spain. Electronic address:

Neuropeptides are potentially valuable tools for clinical applications as they offer many distinct advantages over other bioactive molecules like proteins and monoclonal antibodies due to their reduced side effects and simple chemical modifications. Despite such advantages, the difficulty with neuropeptides often relies on their poor metabolic stability and reduced biological activity intervals. Among the neuropeptides, VIP has been identified as a potentially bioactive agent for inflammatory, neurodegenerative, and cancer-related diseases.

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The modulatory role of melatonin on immune responsiveness.

Curr Opin Investig Drugs

May 2006

Department of Medical Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The University of Seville Medical School, Avda Sanchez Pizjuan 4, 41009 Seville, Spain.

Afterhe successful discovery of the melatonin molecule by Aaron B Lerner et al at Yale University in 1958, melatonin and the pineal gland, a tiny endocrine gland situated at the center of the human brain, have primarily been considered in terms of their effects on the endocrine and reproductive systems. During the last decade, a substantial body of research has defined melatonin as a remarkable molecule with pleiotropic effects on the immune system. Moreover, its synthesis cannot be considered as exclusively endocrine; key immunocompetent cells have the functional enzymatic machinery for melatonin synthesis, paving the wayfo r complex intracrine, autocrine and paracrine regulatory loops.

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