Novel M-CSF-producing γδ T cells protect against recurrent malaria
Murad R. Mamedov(Gladstone Institutes), Mark M. Davis(Stanford Medicine), José Henrique M. Oliveira(Université de Strasbourg), Naresha Saligrama(Washington University in St. Louis), Robert W. Sauerwein(TropIQ Health Sciences), Katherine Cumnock(Stanford University), Ramesh V. Nair(Chromasun (United States)), Yueh‐hsiu Chien(Stanford University), Yue Zhang(Stanford University), David S. Schneider(Stanford University), Florian Rubelt(Stanford University), Anja Scholzen(Radboud University Nijmegen), Damian L. Trujillo(Aduro BioTech (United States)), Justin A. Kenkel(Stanford University)
Cited by 0
Related Papers
Trained immunity, tolerance, priming and differentiation: distinct immunological processes
|Nature Immunology|2020|591
Cell type–specific gene expression differences in complex tissues
|Nature Methods|2010|546
A human T cell-specific molecule is a member of a new gene family.
|The Journal of Immunology|1988|500
Immune imprinting, breadth of variant recognition, and germinal center response in human SARS-CoV-2 infection and vaccination
|Cell|2022|495
T cells use two directionally distinct pathways for cytokine secretion
|Nature Immunology|2006|427