910 resultados para highly-ionized
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Vol. 1: [2], iv, [2], 604 p.; v.2: [2], iv, [2], 616 p.
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First published 1817 with title: Apicius redevivus; or, The cook's oracle.
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Photocopy. St. Peter Port, Guernsey, Channel Is. : Toucan Press, 1977. 25 cm.
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[With some data on vaccine effects]
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"December 8, 1995."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"The original edition was published in 1880."
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Also attributed to William Ogilvie Porter.
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Priced.
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Natural killer T (NKT) cells play an important role in controlling cancers, infectious diseases and autoimmune diseases. Although the rhesus macaque is a useful primate model for many human diseases such as infectious and autoimmune diseases, little is known about their NKT cells. We analyzed Valpha24TCR+ T cells from rhesus macaque peripheral blood mononuclear cells stimulated with aalpha-galactosylceramide (a-GalCer) and interleukin-2. We found that rhesus macaques possess Va24TCR+ T cells, suggesting that recognition of alpha-GalCer is highly conserved between rhesus macaques and humans. The amino acid sequences of the V-J junction for the Valpha24TCR of rhesus macaque and human NKT cells are highly conserved (93% similarity), and the CD1d alpha1-alpha2 domains of both species are highly homologous (95.6%). These findings indicate that the rhesus macaque is a useful primate model for understanding the contribution of NKT cells to the control of human diseases.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-06