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Angaben zur Quelle [Bearbeiten]

Autor     Patrick G. Holt
Titel    Antigen Presentation in the Lung
Zeitschrift    American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
Ausgabe    162
Datum    1. October 2000
Nummer    Supplement 3
Seiten    S151–S156
Anmerkung    This source is not even mentioned in the list of references in Mag. Probably: "[...] the source was omitted in the text unintentionally."
DOI    10.1164/ajrccm.162.supplement_3.15tac2
URL    http://www.atsjournals.org/doi/abs/10.1164/ajrccm.162.supplement_3.15tac2

Literaturverz.   

no
Fußnoten    no
Fragmente    1


Fragmente der Quelle:
[1.] Mag/Fragment 069 10 - Diskussion
Zuletzt bearbeitet: 2017-05-08 21:40:16 Graf Isolan
Fragment, Holt 2000, KomplettPlagiat, Mag, SMWFragment, Schutzlevel, ZuSichten

Typus
KomplettPlagiat
Bearbeiter
Graf Isolan
Gesichtet
Untersuchte Arbeit:
Seite: 69, Zeilen: 10-24
Quelle: Holt 2000
Seite(n): S151, Zeilen: left col. 13-15, 20-27, 32-42
4.4 Antigen presentation in the lung

The epithelial surfaces of the lungs and conducting airways are continuously exposed to mixtures of antigens present in ambient air. The adaptive immune system in the lung is faced with the task of accurately categorizing these stimuli, such that T cell responses that are qualitatively appropriate for neutralization of each agent are selected. Secondarily, it must tightly control the intensity and duration of these responses, in order to preserve the integrity of the fragile, highly vascularized epithelial surfaces in the organ, particularly those at which gas exchange occurs.

The epithelial surfaces within the major conducting airways in which the majority of inhaled antigen is deposited are protected via the scrubbing action of the overlying mucociliary escalator, and the small proportion of inhaled antigen that escapes this mechanism and penetrates into the underlying epithelial layer is then dealt with via specialized antigen-presenting cells (APC), in particular Dendritic cell (DC) populations, within and below the epithelium. The alveolar surfaces in the deep lung are policed instead by macrophage populations, again backed up to APC population below the alveolar epithelium.

[page S151]

The epithelial surfaces of the lungs and conducting airways are continuously exposed to mixtures of antigens present in ambient air. [...] The adaptive immune system in the lung is faced with the task of accurately categorizing these stimuli, such that T cell responses that are qualitatively appropriate for neutralization of each agent are selected. Secondarily, it must tightly control the intensity and duration of these responses, in order to preserve the integrity of the fragile, highly vascularized epithelial surfaces in the organ, particularly those at which gas exchange occurs.

[...] The epithelial surfaces within the major conducting airways in which the bulk of inhaled antigen is deposited are protected via the scrubbing action of the overlying mucociliary escalator, and the small proportion of inhaled antigen that escapes this mechanism and penetrates into the underlying epithelial layer is then dealt with via specialized antigen-presenting cells (APCs), in particular dendritic cell (DC) populations, within and below the epithelium. The alveolar surfaces in the deep lung are policed instead by macrophage populations, again backed up by APC populations below the alveolar epithelium.

Anmerkungen

No source given, nothing has been marked as a citation.

These paragraphs are not part of the 2017 Erratum of Mag.

Sichter
(Graf Isolan)