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Role of Complement Activation in Allograft Inflammation
Nicholas H. Chun
, Julian K. Horwitz
, Peter S. Heeger
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Medicine
Medicine - Nephrology
Nephrology T32
Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences
Marc and Jennifer Lipschultz Precision Immunology Institute
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Review article
›
peer-review
7
Scopus citations
Overview
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Keyphrases
Inflammation
100%
T Cells
100%
Allograft
100%
C5a Receptor
100%
Ischemia-reperfusion Injury
100%
Complement Activation
100%
Allograft Injury
100%
Cell-based
50%
Immune Cells
50%
T Cell Immunity
50%
Immune Regulation
50%
CD8+ T Cells
50%
Receptor 1
50%
Therapeutic Implications
50%
Cell-derived
50%
Receptor 2
50%
Allograft Survival
50%
Allograft Rejection
50%
Human Trials
50%
Ligation
50%
Immunosuppressive Myeloid Cells
50%
Transplant Outcomes
50%
Complement System
50%
Novel Paradigm
50%
Inflammation Injury
50%
C1q Binding
50%
Complement Inhibition
50%
Multiple Contexts
50%
Intracellular Complement
50%
Immunology and Microbiology
Complement Activation
100%
Allograft
100%
T Cell
40%
Reperfusion
40%
Complement Component C5a Receptor
40%
Complement Component 5a
40%
Immunocompetent Cell
20%
Myeloid
20%
Adoptive Immunity
20%
Cytotoxic T-Cell
20%
Murine
20%
Transplant Rejection
20%
Complement Component C1q
20%
Complement System
20%
Immunoregulation
20%
Complement Inhibition
20%