Invertebrate Cytokines and the Phylogeny of Immunity

Facts and Paradoxes

Invertebrate Cytokines and the Phylogeny of Immunity

Facts and Paradoxes

€160.49*

Forthcoming

If you require delivery outside DE, AT or CH, please use our contact form for an inquiry.

Based on the assumption that invertebrates as well as vertebrates possess factors regulating hematopoiesis, response to infection or wounding, studies dealing with the evolution of immunity have focused on the isolation and characterization of putative cytokine-related molecules from invertebrates. Until recently, most of our knowledge of cytokine- and cytokine receptor-like molecules in invertebrates has relied on functional assays and similarities at the physicochemical level. As such, a phylogenetic relationship between invertebrate cytokine-like molecules and invertebrate counterparts could not be convincingly demonstrated.
In the present book, recent studies demonstrating cytokine-like activities and related signaling pathways in invertebrates are critically reviewed, focusing on findings from molecular biology and taking advantage of the completion of the genome from the fly Drosophila and the worm Caenorhabditis elegans.



Invertebrate Humoral Factors: Cytokines as Mediators of Cell Survival
Cytokines in Drosophila Hematopoiesis and Cellular Immunity
Analogies Between Drosophila and Mammalian TRAF Pathways
Regulation of BMP and Activin Signaling in Drosophila
The Chemokine Networks in Sponges: Potential Roles in Morphogenesis, Immunity and Stem Cell Formation
Functional Convergence of Invertebrate and Vertebrate Cytokine-Like Molecules Based on a Similar Lectin-Like Activity
Tunicate Cytokine-like Molecules and Their Involvement in Host Defense Responses.
ISBN 978-3-540-40407-1
Article number 9783540404071
Media type Book
Copyright year 2004
Publisher Springer, Berlin
Length XI, 184 pages
Illustrations XI, 184 p.
Language English