
Biological Response Modifiers
New Approaches to Disease Intervention
- 1st Edition - December 16, 1985
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Editor: Paul Torrence
- Language: English
- Paperback ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 4 3 1 3 3 7 - 8
- eBook ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 3 2 3 - 1 5 1 3 8 - 2
Biological Response Modifiers: New Approaches to Disease Intervention focuses on biological response modifiers (BRMs) and the ways they provide novel approaches to disease control.… Read more

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Request a sales quoteBiological Response Modifiers: New Approaches to Disease Intervention focuses on biological response modifiers (BRMs) and the ways they provide novel approaches to disease control. It examines how BRMs act through an organism's own biological response mechanisms and how their mechanisms of action can be utilized to develop new modalities of chemotherapy. Organized into 15 chapters, this volume begins with an overview of specific agents and approaches to biological therapy, the basic concepts of immunity, and BRM screening. It then discusses interferons and their immunoregulatory functions; mechanism of interferon action; how nucleic acids and polynucleotides regulate the immune system; clinical applications of thymosins and other thymic hormones; the antibacterial and antineoplastic properties of tuftsin; and production and characterization of tumor necrosis factor. The reader is also introduced to detection and activity of colony-stimulating factor; the role of neuroendocrine hormones in the immune system; chalones and other endogenous inhibitors of cell proliferation; biochemistry of lymphotoxins; muramyl peptides as immunopharmacological response modifiers; biological activities of transfer factor in leukocyte dialysates; and requirements for activation and growth of human lymphocytes. This book is a valuable resource for immunologists, clinicians, biochemists, and organic/medicinal chemists.
Contributors
Preface
1. Introduction
I. Biologicals and Biological Response Modifiers
II. Clinical Approaches
III. BRM Screening
IV. Biological Therapy: Specific Agents and Approaches
V. Perspectives
References
2. Basic Concepts of Immunity
I. Introduction
II. Cellular Participants in the Immune System
III. Basic Characteristics of the Immune Response
IV. Lymphocyte Subpopulations
V. Mechanisms of Cell-Cell Communication and Immune Regulation
VI. Immune Regulation
VII. Importance o f the MHC Proteins
VIII. Summary
References
3. Immunoregulatory Functions of Interferon
I. Introduction
II. Interferon Production by Lymphoid Cells
III. Interferon y and the Lymphokine Circuit
IV. Effects of Interferon on Immune Cells and Immune Responses
V. Interferon and Class II Antigen Expression
VI. Interferons in Immunologically Related Disorders
VII. Conclusions
References
4. How Interferon Works
I. Introduction
II. Mechanism of Interferon Action: The 2-5A System
III. Interferon-Induced Disease and 2-5A
IV. Interferon-Induced dsRNA-Activated Protein Kinase
V. Effects of Interferon Treatment on Methylation
VI. Effects of Interferon Treatment on Tryptophan Metabolism
VII. Effects of Interferon on the Cell Membrane
VIII. Miscellaneous Interferon Effects
IX. Summary
References
5. Regulation of the Immune System by Nucleic Acids and Polynucleotides
I. Introduction
II. Nucleic Acids as Immunomodulating Agents
III. Adjuvant Action of Synthetic Polynucleotide Complexes
IV. Immunotherapeutic Applications
References
6. Thymosins and Other Thymic Hormones
I. Introduction
II. Thymus Hormones
III. Clinical Applications of the Thymosins
IV. Conclusions
References
7. Tuftsin (Thr-Lys-Pro-Arg): A Natural Activator of Phagocytic Cells with Antibacterial and Antineoplastic Activity
I. Introduction
II. How Tuftsin Came About
III. Biochemistry of Tuftsin
IV. Biological Activity of Tuftsin
V. Tuftsin Receptors
VI. Tuftsin Toxicity
VII. Other Effects of Tuftsin
VIII. Tuftsin Assay
IX. Chemical Synthesis o f Tuftsin
X. Tuftsin Deficiency Syndromes
References
8. Tumor Necrosis Factor
I. Introduction
II. Historical Events
III. Production and Characterization of TNF
IV. TNF Assays
V. Role of TNF in Macrophage-Mediated Tumor Cell Killing
VI. Mechanisms of TNF Action
VII. Other Effects of TNF
VIII. Clinical Potential
Addendum
References
9. Colony-Stimulating Factor
I. Introduction
II. Detection and Activity o f CSF
III. Regulation of CSF Production and Activity
IV. Effect of CSF on Macrophage Effector Function
V. Macrophage Effector Functions Enhanced by CSF
References
10. Neuroendocrine Hormones and the Immune System
I. Introduction
II. Effect of Products of the Polyproteins Proopiomelanocortin and Proenkephalin on Immune Functions
III. Effect of Arginine Vasopressin, Oxytocin, and Related Peptides on Interferon Production
IV. Regulation of B-Cell Function by Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone (Thyrotropin)
V. Common Immune Functions and Some Neuropeptides and Lymphokines
VI. Second-Messenger Signals for Lymphokines and Neuroendocrine Hormones
VII. Summary
References
11. Chalones and Other Endogenous Inhibitors of Cell Proliferation
I. Regulation of Cell Proliferation as an Interaction of Stimulators and Inhibitors
II. Properties of the Inhibitors
III. Possible Applications of Endogenous Inhibitors in Cancer Treatment
IV. Conclusions
References
12. Lymphotoxins: A Multicomponent Family of Cell-Lytic and Growth-Inhibitory Proteins
I. Introduction
II. Cells and Cellular Processes Involved in Lymphotoxin Release in Vitro
III. Biochemical Characterization of Lymphotoxins
IV. Effects of Lymphotoxins on Cells in Vitro
V. Synergy of Lymphotoxins with Interferons
VI. Antitumor Effects of Lymphotoxins in Vivo
VII. Conclusions
References
13. Muramyl Peptides as Immunopharmacological Response Modifiers
I. Introduction
II. Modification of Specific Immunity by Muramyl Peptides
III. Modification of Nonspecific Immunity by Muramyl Peptides
IV. Modification of Macrophages or Other Cell Responses by Muramyl Peptides
V. Modification of Temperature and Slow-Wave Sleep by Muramyl Peptides
VI. Discussion
References
14. Transfer Factor
I. Introduction
II. Biological Activities in Leukocyte Dialysates
III. Assays for Transfer Factor
IV. Properties of Transfer Factor
V. Possible Mechanisms of Action
VI. Summary and Conclusions
References
15. Human Lymphocyte Proliferation: Requirements for Activation and Growth
I. Introduction
II. Immunoregulation of B Lymphocytes
III. Immunoregulation of T Lymphocytes
IV. Cell Lineage Specificity of Growth Factors
V. Regulation of the Immune System by B Lymphocytes
VI. Summary
References
Index
- Edition: 1
- Published: December 16, 1985
- No. of pages (eBook): 416
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Language: English
- Paperback ISBN: 9780124313378
- eBook ISBN: 9780323151382
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