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Your search keyword '"Wasps immunology"' showing total 250 results

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101. Mgat1-dependent N-glycosylation of membrane components primes Drosophila melanogaster blood cells for the cellular encapsulation response.

102. Importance of controlled sting challenge and component-resolved diagnosis in the success of venom immunotherapy.

103. Safety of hymenoptera venom immunotherapy: a systematic review.

104. Lepidopteran transcriptome analysis following infection by phylogenetically unrelated polydnaviruses highlights differential and common responses.

106. Complex effects of parasitoids on pharmacophagy and diet choice of a polyphagous caterpillar.

107. Identification of an in vitro interaction between an insect immune suppressor protein (CrV2) and G alpha proteins.

108. The Rho-family GTPase Rac1 regulates integrin localization in Drosophila immunosurveillance cells.

109. Three days rush venom immunotherapy in bee allergy: safe, inexpensive and instantaneously effective.

110. Alternating Polistes-Vespula venom immunotherapy: a therapeutic strategy to resolve a diagnostic deficiency.

111. Malignancy and specific allergen immunotherapy: the results of a case series.

113. Venom proteins from endoparasitoid wasps and their role in host-parasite interactions.

114. Social complexity and nesting habits are factors in the evolution of antimicrobial defences in wasps.

115. Common filaggrin null alleles are not associated with hymenoptera venom allergy in Europeans.

116. Role for sumoylation in systemic inflammation and immune homeostasis in Drosophila larvae.

117. Identification and characterization of venom proteins of two solitary wasps, Eumenes pomiformis and Orancistrocerus drewseni.

118. Expression of immune-response genes in lepidopteran host is suppressed by venom from an endoparasitoid, Pteromalus puparum.

119. Parasitic infection protects wasp larvae against a bacterial challenge.

120. Identification and characterization of the parasitic wasp Nasonia defensins: positive selection targeting the functional region?

121. Gene expression analysis in predicting the effectiveness of insect venom immunotherapy.

122. Identification, recombinant expression, and characterization of the 100 kDa high molecular weight Hymenoptera venom allergens Api m 5 and Ves v 3.

123. Serum concentration of baseline mast cell tryptase: evidence for a decline during long-term immunotherapy for Hymenoptera venom allergy.

124. The strepsipteran endoparasite Xenos vesparum alters the immunocompetence of its host, the paper wasp Polistes dominulus.

125. Identification, cloning and expression of a second gene (vpr1) from the venom of the endoparasitic wasp, Pimpla hypochondriaca that displays immunosuppressive activity.

126. Predictors of severe systemic anaphylactic reactions in patients with Hymenoptera venom allergy: importance of baseline serum tryptase-a study of the European Academy of Allergology and Clinical Immunology Interest Group on Insect Venom Hypersensitivity.

127. IkB genes encoded in Cotesia plutellae bracovirus suppress an antiviral response and enhance baculovirus pathogenicity against the diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella.

128. Mastocytosis and insect venom allergy: diagnosis, safety and efficacy of venom immunotherapy.

129. The VISYT trial: Venom Immunotherapy Safety and Tolerability with purified vs nonpurified extracts.

130. Immunotherapy improves health-related quality of life of adult patients with dermal reactions following yellow jacket stings.

131. Structural and immunological characterization of the N-glycans from the major yellow jacket allergen Ves v 2: the N-glycan structures are needed for the human antibody recognition.

132. Consequences of constitutive and induced variation in plant nutritional quality for immune defence of a herbivore against parasitism.

133. The Drosophila cell adhesion molecule Neuroglian regulates Lissencephaly-1 localisation in circulating immunosurveillance cells.

134. Dialyzed venom skin tests for identifying yellow jacket-allergic patients not detected using standard venom.

135. Venom immunotherapy (VIT): clinical efficacy and improvement in quality of life.

136. The wasp-horsefly syndrome.

137. Prophenoloxidases 1 and 2 from the spruce budworm, Choristoneura fumiferana: molecular cloning and assessment of transcriptional regulation by a polydnavirus.

138. [Cross-reactivity to honeybee and wasp venom].

139. Variation of success of Leptopilina boulardi in Drosophila yakuba: the mechanisms explored.

140. A Helix pomatia lectin binding protein on the extraembryonic membrane of the polyembryonic wasp Macrocentrus cingulum protects embryos from being encapsulated by hemocytes of host Ostrinia furnaclis.

141. Eicosanoids mediate melanotic nodulation reactions to viral infection in larvae of the parasitic wasp, Pimpla turionellae.

142. Transient expression of protein tyrosine phosphatases encoded in Cotesia plutellae bracovirus inhibits insect cellular immune responses.

143. Fatal anaphylactic sting reaction in a patient with mastocytosis.

144. Convergent use of RhoGAP toxins by eukaryotic parasites and bacterial pathogens.

145. Social prophylaxis: group interaction promotes collective immunity in ant colonies.

146. Hypersensitivity to Vespula and Polistes: can we tell the primary sensitization from the clinical history?

147. Detection of parasitism in diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella (L.), using differential melanization and coagulation reactions.

148. Protein tyrosine phosphatases encoded in Cotesia plutellae bracovirus: sequence analysis, expression profile, and a possible biological role in host immunosuppression.

149. Basal serum tryptase level correlates with severity of hymenoptera sting and age.

150. Premedication with montelukast reduces local reactions of allergen immunotherapy.

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