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Advances in Immunology. Volume 156

  • Book

  • November 2022
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5638290

Advances in Immunology, Volume 156, the latest release in a long-established and highly respected publication, presents current developments and comprehensive reviews in immunology, with this volume covering self-referential immune recognition through C-type lectin receptors, genetic susceptibility to autoimmunity, activation and regulation of the cGAS-STING pathway and the implications of IL-15 trans-presentation on the immune response.

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Table of Contents

1. Self-referential immune recognition through C-type lectin receptors

Carla Guenther, Masamichi Nagae and Sho Yamasaki

2. Genetic susceptibility to autoimmunity: Current status and challenges

Miaozhen Huang and Huji Xu

3. Recent advances in the activation and regulation of the cGAS-STING pathway

Run Fang, Qifei Jiang, Xiaoyu Yu, Zhen Zhao and Zhengfan Jiang

4. The implications of IL-15 trans-presentation on the immune response

Thomas A. Waldmann, Robert Waldmann, Jian-Xin Lin and Warren J. Leonard

Authors

Frederick W. Alt Investigator and Director of the Program in Cellular and Molecular Medicine, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Research Laboratories, The Children's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA. Frederick W. Alt is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) Investigator and Director of the Program in Cellular and Molecular Medicine (PCMM) at Boston Children's Hospital (BCH). He is the Charles A. Janeway Professor of Pediatrics and Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical School. He works on elucidating mechanisms that generate antigen receptor diversity and, more generally, on mechanisms that generate and suppress genomic instability in mammalian cells, with a focus on the immune and nervous systems. Recently, his group has developed senstive genome-wide approaches to identify mechanisms of DNA breaks and rearrangements in normal and cancer cells. He has been elected to the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the U.S. National Academy of Medicine, and the European Molecular Biology Organization. His awards include the Albert Szent-Gyorgyi Prize for Progress in Cancer Research, the Novartis Prize for Basic Immunology, the Lewis S. Rosensteil Prize for Distinugished work in Biomedical Sciences, the Paul Berg and Arthur Kornberg Lifetime Achievement Award in Biomedical Sciences, and the William Silan Lifetime Achievement Award in Mentoring from Harvard Medical School.