نتایج جستجو برای: microchimerism

تعداد نتایج: 449  

Journal: :The Journal of clinical investigation 1999
S Maloney A Smith D E Furst D Myerson K Rupert P C Evans J L Nelson

Recent studies indicate that fetal cells persist in maternal blood for decades after pregnancy. Maternal cells are known to engraft and persist in infants with immunodeficiency, but whether maternal cells persist long-term in immunocompetent offspring has not specifically been investigated. We developed sensitive human leukocyte antigen-specific (HLA-specific) PCR assays and targeted nonshared ...

2007
Jiang F. Zhong Leslie P. Weiner

Microchimerism refers to the status of harboring cells from another individual at low levels. It is well known that cells traffic bidirectionally between fetus and mother during pregnancy. This situation resembles a naturally occurring long lasting fetal stem cell transplantation. The fetus acts as the donor and the mother acts as the recipient. To study the role of microchimerism in tissue reg...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2000
N C Lambert P C Evans T L Hashizumi S Maloney T Gooley D E Furst J L Nelson

The host's MHC genotype plays a critical role in susceptibility to autoimmune diseases. We previously proposed that persistent fetal microchimerism from pregnancy contributes to the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases such as scleroderma. In the current study, we investigated whether the specific host MHC genotype is associated with persistent microchimerism among T lymphocytes in women with sc...

Journal: :Transplantation proceedings 2007
A Saraji G Pourmand A Mehrsai M Taherimahmodi M Nikoobakht A Asadpour B Nikbin N Tajik A Emamzadeh

OBJECTIVE We sought to study microchimerism in a group of kidney transplant recipients. MATERIALS AND METHODS In this study, the peripheral blood microchimerism (PBM) after renal transplantation was retrospectively evaluated in 32 male-to-female recipients of living unrelated or cadaveric donor renal transplants. Using a nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification specific for SRY re...

2013
Jinny K. Eun Katherine A. Guthrie Gary Zirpoli V. K. Gadi

Microchimeric cells of fetal origin persistent in the maternal circulation post-partum are associated with protection against invasive breast cancer. Here using quantitative genomic methods, we evaluated for the presence of male fetal microchimerism in buffy coat cells from women with a prior history of breast carcinomas in situ (CIS) and in healthy controls. Fetal microchimerism was detected i...

Journal: :Annals of the rheumatic diseases 2005
N C Lambert J M Pang Z Yan T D Erickson A M Stevens D E Furst J L Nelson

BACKGROUND Male DNA or cells are often used to measure microchimerism in a woman. In studies of autoimmune diseases male microchimerism is most often attributed to the previous birth of a son. OBJECTIVE To determine the frequency of male microchimerism in healthy women or women with systemic sclerosis who had never given birth to a son. METHODS Real time quantitative polymerase chain reacti...

Journal: :Blood 2008
Ryan M Gill Tzong-Hae Lee Garth H Utter William F Reed Li Wen Dan Chafets Michael P Busch

Microchimerism (MC), defined as the persistence of allogeneic cells at low concentrations, is well documented in transfused trauma patients. We hypothesized that genetic polymorphisms linked to cytokine production could contribute to trauma-induced immune modulation and development of microchimerism after transfusion of trauma patients. We used high-throughput SYBR-green-based genotyping of sin...

2008
Ryan M. Gill Tzong-Hae Lee Garth H. Utter William F. Reed Li Wen Dan Chafets Michael P. Busch

Microchimerism (MC), defined as the persistence of allogeneic cells at low concentrations, is well documented in transfused trauma patients. We hypothesized that genetic polymorphisms linked to cytokine production could contribute to trauma-induced immune modulation and development of microchimerism after transfusion of trauma patients. We used high-throughput SYBR-green-based genotyping of sin...

Journal: :International journal of clinical and experimental medicine 2010
Ralph P Miech

Fetal microchimerism occurs in normal human reproduction and is a relatively new discovery in biology. Recent data in the scientific and medical literature indicates that some of the autoimmune diseases that show a predilection for women in their child-bearing years and beyond are linked to fetal microchimerism from previous pregnancies. The pathological role of fetal microchimeric progenitor i...

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