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Title Signal transduction pathways in autoimmunity / volume editor, Amnon Altman
Published Basel ; New York : Karger, 2002

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Description 1 online resource (viii, 197 pages) : illustrations
Series Current directions in autoimmunity, 1422-2132 ; v. 5
Current directions in autoimmunity ; v. 5. 1422-2132
Contents ""Contents""; ""Preface""; ""Regulation of Signal Transduction by the Fc Receptor Family Members and Their Involvement in Autoimmunity""; ""The Role of TNF/TNFR in Organ-Specific and Systemic Autoimmunity: Implications for the Design of Optimized �Anti-TNF� Therapies""; ""CD40 Signaling and Autoimmunity""; ""TGF- : Receptors, Signaling Pathways and Autoimmunity""; ""Interleukin-2 Signaling and the Maintenance of Self-Tolerance""; ""Role of the B7-CD28/CTLA-4 Pathway in Autoimmune Disease""; ""Abnormal T Lymphocyte Signal Transduction in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus""
Lyn/CD22/SHP-1 and Their Importance in AutoimmunityRegulation of Immune Responses by E3 Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases -- Keeping the T-Cell Immune Response in Balance: Role of Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases in Autoimmunity -- Author Index -- Subject Index
Summary An immensely complex network of interactions between multiple cell types and cytokines regulates the immune system. Ligand binding to antigen-specific, Fc, or cytokine receptors initiates differentiation, activation and proliferation of multiple immune system cell lineages. These activating pathways are counteracted by inhibitory receptors. In the past two decades, considerable work on mechanistic and functional details of such intracellular signaling pathways has led to the realization that an excess of stimulatory/positive signals as well as a deficiency in inhibitory/negative signals can both result in a hyperactive immune system leading to autoimmunity. The chapters included in this volume represent but a few examples of the close link between aberrant signaling pathways and autoimmune diseases. They cover a variety of cells (T, B and myeloid/monocytic cells), receptors (for antigen, Fc and cytokines) and intracellular signaling molecules (kinases, phosphatases, adapters and transcription factors) in the immune system. This book brings together clinical and experimental aspects of autoimmune disease and the fundamental science of intracellular signaling pathways. Therefore, it should be of interest to clinical investigators of autoimmune diseases as well as to basic immunologists and cell biologists interested in the molecular basis of signal transduction in the immune system
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Notes Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002. http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212 MiAaHDL
Print version record
digitized 2010 HathiTrust Digital Library committed to preserve pda MiAaHDL
Subject Autoimmunity.
Cellular signal transduction.
Autoimmunity -- physiology
Autoimmunity
Signal Transduction
Autoimmune Diseases -- physiopathology
Cytokines -- immunology
Leukocytes -- immunology
Signal Transduction -- immunology
Autoimmunity
Cellular signal transduction
Autoaggressionskrankheit -- Signaltransduktion -- Aufsatzsammlung.
Signaltransduktion -- Autoaggressionskrankheit -- Aufsatzsammlung.
Form Electronic book
Author Altman, Amnon
S. Karger (Firm)
ISBN 9783318007732
3318007730