Scripps VIVO scripps research logo

  • Index
  • Log in
  • Home
  • People
  • Organizations
  • Research
  • Events
Search form
As of April 1st VIVO Scientific Profiles will no longer updated for faculty, and the link to VIVO will be removed from the library website. Faculty profile pages will continue to be updated via Interfolio. VIVO will continue being used behind the scenes to update graduate student profiles. Please contact helplib@scripps.edu if you have questions.
How to download citations from VIVO | Alternative profile options

Receptors, Cytokine

Concept
uri icon
  • Overview
scroll to property group menus

Overview

subject area of

  • 50 Years of structural immunology  Academic Article
  • A family of leukemia inhibitory factor-binding peptides that can act as antagonists when conjugated to poly(ethylene glycol)  Academic Article
  • A new perspective on V3 phenotype prediction  Academic Article
  • A receptor-induced by lymphocyte-activation (ILA) - a new member of the human nerve-growth-factor tumor-necrosis-factor receptor family  Academic Article
  • Affinity maturation of leukemia inhibitory factor and conversion to potent antagonists of signaling  Academic Article
  • CCR3 and CCR5 are co-receptors for HIV-1 infection of microglia  Academic Article
  • CCR5 levels and expression pattern correlate with infectability by macrophage-tropic HIV-1, in vitro  Academic Article
  • CD4-induced interaction of primary HIV-1 gp120 glycoproteins with the chemokine receptor CCR-5  Academic Article
  • Chemokine receptor CCR5 genotype influences the kinetics of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection in human PBL-SCID mice  Academic Article
  • Convergence of mammalian RQC and C-end rule proteolytic pathways via alanine tailing  Academic Article
  • Cytokine receptor dimerization and activation: prospects for small molecule agonists  Academic Article
  • Differentiation-dependent and stimulus-specific expression of ILA, the human 4-1BB-homologue, in cells of mesenchymal origin  Academic Article
  • Gene transcription through activation of G-protein-coupled chemoattractant receptors  Academic Article
  • HIV-1 entry and macrophage inflammatory protein-1 beta-mediated signaling are independent functions of the chemokine receptor CCR5  Academic Article
  • Higher order iminodiacetic acid libraries for probing protein-protein interactions  Academic Article
  • ILA, a member of the human nerve growth factor tumor necrosis factor receptor family, regulates T-lymphocyte proliferation and survival  Academic Article
  • Ila, the human 4-1bb homolog, is inducible in lymphoid and other cell lineages  Academic Article
  • Immunosuppressive and autoimmune effects of thimerosal in mice  Academic Article
  • In vivo-activated cd4 t cells upregulate cxc chemokine receptor 5 and reprogram their response to lymphoid chemokines  Academic Article
  • Mutational mapping of functional residues in tissue factor - identification of factor-vii recognition determinants in both structural modules of the predicted cytokine receptor homology domain  Academic Article
  • Pannocytes: Distinctive cells found in rheumatoid arthritis articular cartilage erosions  Academic Article
  • Prevention of crescentic glomerulonephritis by immunoneutralization of the fractalkine receptor cx(3)cr1 - rapid communication  Academic Article
  • Serum leptin activity in obese and lean patients  Academic Article
  • Surrobodies with functional tails  Academic Article
  • The beta-chemokine receptors CCR3 and CCR5 facilitate infection by primary HIV-1 isolates  Academic Article
  • Two orphan seven-transmembrane segment receptors which are expressed in CD4-positive cells support simian immunodeficiency virus infection  Academic Article
  • Uncovering of a short internal peptide activates a tRNA synthetase procytokine  Academic Article
  • Utilization of C-C chemokine receptor 5 by the envelope glycoproteins of a pathogenic simian immunodeficiency virus, SIV(mac)239  Academic Article

©2022 The Scripps Research Institute | Terms of Use | Powered by VIVO

  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Support