The Infona portal uses cookies, i.e. strings of text saved by a browser on the user's device. The portal can access those files and use them to remember the user's data, such as their chosen settings (screen view, interface language, etc.), or their login data. By using the Infona portal the user accepts automatic saving and using this information for portal operation purposes. More information on the subject can be found in the Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. By closing this window the user confirms that they have read the information on cookie usage, and they accept the privacy policy and the way cookies are used by the portal. You can change the cookie settings in your browser.
A permanently growing body of information is becoming available about the quality of protective immune responses induced by mucosal immunization. Attenuated live bacterial vaccines can be administered orally and induce long-lasting protective immunity in humans without causing major side effects. An attenuated Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi strain is registered as live oral vaccine against typhoid...
Mucosal immunization with subunit vaccines requires new types of antigen delivery vehicles and adjuvants for optimal immune responses. We have developed a non-living and non-genetically modified gram-positive bacterial delivery particle (GEM) that has built-in adjuvant activity and a high loading capacity for externally added heterologous antigens that are fused to a high affinity binding domain....
Protein antigens administered via the oral route are exposed to a hostile environment in the gastrointestinal tract, consisting of digestive enzymes and a range of pH (1–7.5). Using a delivery system can afford protection to entrapped components against degradation and permit delivery of antigen to the cells responsible for generating local and systemic immune responses. In this comparative study,...
Delivering soluble (auto) antigenic peptides via the naso-respiratory route induces tolerance to that peptide and suppression of experimental models of autoimmune disease. In the normal lung, respiratory tract dendritic cells (RTDCs) efficiently endocytose soluble antigens, migrate to regional lymph nodes and present peptide to T cells that subsequently become tolerant. This article describes protocols...
Mucosal vaccination is emerging as a potential administration route for eliciting antigen-specific mucosal and systemic immunogenicity. Most mucosal vaccines have been administered in a phosphate-buffered saline vehicle that may limit the exposure of antigens to the mucosal surfaces and result in poor immunogenicity. To improve the potency of the mucosal vaccines, we have developed mucosal vaccine...
Learning commonly refers to the modification of behavior through experience, whereby an animal gains information about stimulus-response contingencies from interacting with its physical environment. Social learning, on the other hand, occurs when the same information originates, not from the animal’s personal experience, but from the actions of others. Socially biased learning is the ‘collective outcome...
In this article, we describe methods for using oxygen-15 water (H 2 O 15 ) positron emission tomography (PET) to explore the functional neuroanatomy of cognition in awake, non-human primates. The discussion is based on a recent study designed to identify regions in the monkey brain associated with perceiving auditory stimuli, and species-specific calls, in particular [Gil-da-Costa...
Recordings of neuronal activity in freely moving rats are common in experiments where electrical signals are transmitted using cables. Such techniques are not common in monkeys because their prehensile abilities are thought to preclude such techniques. However, analysis of brain mechanisms underlying spatial navigation and cognition require the subject to walk. We have developed techniques for recordings...
A telemetric system is described which allows the wireless registration of extracellular neuronal activity and vocalization-associated skull vibrations in freely moving, socially living squirrel monkeys (Saimiri sciureus). The system consists of a carrier platform with numerous guiding tubes implanted on the skull. Custom-made microdrives are mounted on the platform, allowing the exploration of two...
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has developed rapidly into a major non-invasive tool for studying the human brain. However, due to a variety of technical difficulties, it has yet to be widely adopted for use in alert, trained non-human primates. Our laboratory has been developing techniques for such fMRI studies. As background, we first consider basic principles of fMRI imaging, experimental...
The present study tested the validity of an automated ethanol dispensing apparatus that is capable of identifying individual monkeys and precisely measuring their levels of ethanol consumption while living in a social group, and assessed individual subjects’ level of consumption when alone and in social groups.In Experiment 1, 21 rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) were given access for 1-h each day...
Behavioral and neurophysiological studies strongly suggest that visual orienting reflects the integration of sensory, motor, and motivational variables. Relatively little is known, however, regarding the goals that govern visual orienting of animals in their natural environments. Field observations suggest that most nonhuman primates orient to features of their natural environments whose salience...
Gene expression profiling of brain tissue samples applied to DNA microarrays promises to provide novel insights into the neurobiological bases of primate behavior. The strength of the microarray technology lies in the ability to simultaneously measure the expression levels of all genes in defined brain regions that are known to mediate behavior. The application of microarrays presents, however, various...
Microdialysis sampling is a well-known method for collection of low molecular weight hydrophilic analytes. Due to the success of this sampling technique for these analytes, many researchers have wanted to extend the use of this method to a wider range of analytes—particularly proteins and peptides. These analytes pose unique challenges during microdialysis sampling. The primary challenges are the...
The inexpensive and highly effective enzyme-linked immunosorbant assay (ELISA) is widely used for the quantification of biomarkers in a variety of biological samples. The applicability of the standard ELISA is difficult when experiments yield low volume samples. In such studies, the capacity of sample collection system does not meet the sample volume requirements to measure multiple different cytokines...
Standard proliferation assays used for analysis of T cell function have significant shortcomings, including limited sensitivity, lack of quantitative readouts, and considerable variability. Recently, flow cytometric methods have been developed to allow multiparametric detection of cell surface antigens and intracellular cytokine expression in response to polyclonal stimuli and antigen. We have optimized...
The measurement of soluble cytokines and other analytes in serum and plasma is becoming increasingly important in the study and management of many diseases. As a result, there is a growing demand for rapid, precise, and cost-effective measurement of such analytes in both clinical and research laboratories. Multiplex bead array assays provide quantitative measurement of large numbers of analytes using...
Set the date range to filter the displayed results. You can set a starting date, ending date or both. You can enter the dates manually or choose them from the calendar.