Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5917901 | Molecular Immunology | 2009 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Thus, exposing the cells to cytokine stress allows to distinguish between low- and non-expressed alleles and to classify alleles with a questionable expression pattern (Q alleles). Classifying HLA alleles in expressed and non-expressed variants is essential for matching assessments. Additionally, this discrimination between cytokine inducible and non-inducible defect alleles may be important in allotransplant settings in which a cytokine storm usually occurs following pre-transplant myeloablative conditioning or post-transplant immunosuppressive therapy.
Keywords
FITCIFN-γCMLSBTRT-PCRHSCTβ2-mMFIB-LCLmAbFACSHLA expressionGvHDβ2-microglobulinNull allelesamino acidMonoclonal antibodyhuman leucocyte antigenHLAEBVinterferon-γGraft-versus-host diseasesequence-based typingtumor necrosis factor-αbase pairreverse transcription PCRB-lymphoblastoid cell lineTNF-αfluorescein isothiocyanatefluorescence-activated cell sorterChronic myeloid leukemiamajor histocompatibility complexMHCmean fluorescence intensitypolymerase chain reactionPCREpstein-Barr virusStem cell transplantationHematopoietic stem cell transplantation
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Authors
Jan Hinrichs, Constança Figueiredo, Kaimo Hirv, Joannis Mytilineos, Rainer Blasczyk, Peter A. Horn, Britta Eiz-Vesper,