Eosinophils in allergy and related diseases : proceedings of a workshop, Tokyo, Japan, June 19, 1999
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Eosinophils in allergy and related diseases : proceedings of a workshop, Tokyo, Japan, June 19, 1999
(International archives of allergy and immunology, v. 122 ; Supplement ; 1)
Karger, 2000
Note
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The 12th annual Workshop on Eosinophils in Allergy and Related Diseases was held in Tokyo in 1999. Fifteen reports were selected for this volume of proceedings. These were mostly basic studies, such as investigations of the mechanism of eosinophil activation, or the biological importance of cytokines, chemokines, and chemoattractants. It is generally accepted that mediators released by eosinophils are important in the development of chronic allergic inflammation in the upper and lower airways characterized by late asthmatic and nasal reactions, remodelling of bronchial mucosa, and irreversible pathological changes of nasal tissue, although relatively little is known about the mechanism of eosinophil mediator release.
Table of Contents
- Localisation of sialyl glycoconjugates in eosinophil-specific granules after degranulation stimuli, J. Ohmori, Y. Nawa
- ecalectin/galectin-9, a novel eosinophil chemoattractant - its function and production, M. Hirashima
- a rapid and simple photometric assay for quantification of eosinophil chemotaxis, H. Nagase et al
- eosinophil-adhesion-inducing activity produced by antigen-stimulated mononuclear cells involves GM-CSF, M. Nagata et al
- systemic T helper 2 cell activation is not sufficient for antigen-induced eosinophil recruitment into th airways, H. Nakajima et al
- role of secretory IgA, secretory component, and eosinophils in mucosal inflammation, Y. Motegi et al
- regulation of CD69 expression on eosinophil precursors by interferon-gamma, K. Ochiai et al
- stimulation of the beta2 integrin alphaMbeta 2, triggers tyrosine phosphorylation and cellular degranulation on human eosinophils, M. Kato et al
- analysis of the prolongation of rat eosinophil survival induced by recombinant rat interleukin-5, K. Ishihara et al
- induction of apoptosis in bronchial eosinophils -beneficial or harmful? N. Yamashita et al
- expression of eotaxin by normal airway epithelial cells after influenza virus A infection, M. Kawaguchi et al
- autocrine regulation of exotaxin in normal human bronchial epithelial cells, H. Saito et al
- regulation of human eotaxin generation by Th-/Th-2-derived cytokins, M. Miyamasu et al
- an optimal condition of bronchial cell proliferation stimulated by insulin-like growth factor-I, H. Oyamada et al
- IL-5 synthesis by T cells of allergic subjects is regulated at the transcriptional level, K. Ogawa et al.
by "Nielsen BookData"