All Stories

  1. Histoire du thymus
  2. In-uterocoxsackievirus B4 infection of the mouse thymus
  3. High TMEM45A expression is correlated to epidermal keratinization
  4. Hypothyroïdie infraclinique non autoimmune et statut iodé : étude prospective d’intervention
  5. Programming of neuroendocrine self in the thymus and its defect in the development of neuroendocrine autoimmunity
  6. Thymus and type 1 diabetes: An update
  7. Management of inflammatory bowel disease in pregnancy
  8. Oxytocin: An altruistic hormone full of promises
  9. Ocytocine : une hormone altruiste pleine de promesses
  10. Viral origin of type 1 diabetes
  11. Presentation of neuroendocrine self in the thymus: a necessity for integrated evolution of the immune and neuroendocrine systems
  12. The actors of human implantation: gametes, embryo and endometrium
  13. Immunology in the clinic review series; focus on type 1 diabetes and viruses: enterovirus, thymus and type 1 diabetes pathogenesis
  14. Evidence for cross-talk between the LH receptor and LH during implantation in mice
  15. Expression of the Growth Hormone/Insulin-Like Growth Factor Axis during Balb/c Thymus Ontogeny and Effects of Growth Hormone upon ex vivo T Cell Differentiation
  16. Mechanisms of the Anti-Obesity Effects of Oxytocin in Diet-Induced Obese Rats
  17. Rheumatoid arthritis and pregnancy: evolution of disease activity and pathophysiological considerations for drug use
  18. Immune tolerance and angiogenesis during embryo implantation: the role of hCG
  19. Intranasal Oxytocin as an Adjunct to Escitalopram in Major Depression
  20. Differentially abundant transcripts in PBMC of hospitalized geriatric patients with hip fracture compared to healthy aged controls
  21. Impact of the somatotrope axis upon thymus function
  22. Transcriptomic biomarkers of the response of hospitalized geriatric patients admitted with heart failure. Comparison to hospitalized geriatric patients with infectious diseases or hip fracture
  23. 033 L’infusion chronique et centrale d’oxytocine améliore la résistance à l’insuline induite par une nourriture riche en lipides chez le rat
  24. Thymic Self-Antigen Expression for the Design of a Negative/Tolerogenic Self-Vaccine against Type 1 Diabetes
  25. Type 1 Diabetes Immunological Tolerance and Immunotherapy
  26. The Role of the Thymus in the Integrated Evolution of the Recombinase-Dependent Adaptive Immune Response and the Neuroendocrine System
  27. Thymic recovery after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation with non-myeloablative conditioning is limited to patients younger than 60 years of age
  28. Transcriptomic biomarkers of the response of hospitalized geriatric patients with infectious diseases
  29. The thymus as an obligatory intersection between the immune and neuroendocrine systems: pharmacological implications
  30. Thymic self-antigens for the design of a negative/tolerogenic self-vaccination against type 1 diabetes
  31. Human chorionic gonadotropin: A hormone with immunological and angiogenic properties
  32. Transcriptomic biomarkers of human ageing in peripheral blood mononuclear cell total RNA
  33. Oxytocin: From milk ejection to maladaptation in stress response and psychiatric disorders. A psychoneuroendocrine perspective
  34. HCG: a hormone with immunological and angiogenic properties
  35. Impact of Growth Hormone (GH) Deficiency and GH Replacement upon Thymus Function in Adult Patients
  36. Aire and Foxp3 Expression in a Particular Microenvironment for T Cell Differentiation
  37. Les cibles hormonales de la réponse auto-immune
  38. Coxsackievirus B4 infection of murine foetal thymus organ cultures
  39. Evidence for neo-generation of T cells by the thymus after non-myeloablative conditioning
  40. Prolonged Viral RNA Detection in Blood and Lymphoid Tissues from Coxsackievirus B4 E2 Orally‐Inoculated Swiss Mice
  41. Thymus‐Dependent T Cell Tolerance of Neuroendocrine Functions
  42. Dendritic Cell Differentiation and Immune Tolerance to Insulin-Related Peptides in Igf2-Deficient Mice
  43. Immune reconstitution after CD8-depleted or unmanipulated peripheral blood stem cells transplantation following nonmyeloablative conditioning: Results from a prospective randomized trial
  44. Oxytocin receptor pattern of expression in primary lung cancer and in normal human lung
  45. Human Endometrial Leukemia Inhibitory Factor and Interleukin-6: Control of Secretion by Transforming Growth Factor-β-Related Members
  46. Ontogenesis and functional aspects of oxytocin and vasopressin gene expression in the thymus network
  47. An Insulin‐like Growth Factor 2‐Derived Self‐Antigen Inducing a Regulatory Cytokine Profile after Presentation to Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells from DQ8+ Type 1 Diabetic Adolescents: Preliminary Design of a Thymus‐Based Tolerogenic Self...
  48. Coxsackievirus B4 Infection of Human Fetal Thymus Cells
  49. Immunoendocrinology in Health and Disease
  50. The Central Role of the Thymus in the Development of Self-Tolerance and Autoimmunity in the Neuroendocrine System
  51. Presentation of Neuroendocrine Self in the Thymus: Toward a Novel Type of Vaccine / Immunotherapy
  52. Neurohypophysial Receptor Gene Expression by Thymic T Cell Subsets and Thymic T Cell Lymphoma Cell Lines
  53. Role of the Thymus in the Development of Tolerance and Autoimmunity towards the Neuroendocrine System
  54. Quantification of T cell receptor rearrangement excision circles to estimate thymic function: an important new tool for endocrine-immune physiology
  55. AUTOIMMUNITY AND PREGNANCY: THEORY AND PRACTICE
  56. Persistent Infection of Human Thymic Epithelial Cells by Coxsackievirus B4
  57. Positive Effects of Glucocorticoids on T Cell Function by Up-Regulation of IL-7 Receptor  
  58. Central Self - Tolerance by Thymic Presentation of Self - Antigens and Autoimmunity
  59. Thymic expression of insulin‐related genes in an animal model of autoimmune type 1 diabetes
  60. Thymic expression of insulin-related genes in an animal model of autoimmune type 1 diabetes
  61. Involvement of Insulin-Like Growth Factors in Early T Cell Development: A Study Using Fetal Thymic Organ Cultures1
  62. Focal Adhesion Kinases: Interest in Immunoendocrinology, Developmental Biology, and Cancer
  63. Thymic Neuroendocrine Self‐Antigens: Role in T‐Cell Development and Central T‐Cell Self‐Tolerance
  64. Tumor Necrosis Factor α Decreases, and Interleukin-10 Increases, the Sensitivity of Human Monocytes to Dexamethasone: Potential Regulation of the Glucocorticoid Receptor
  65. Characterization of the Insulin‐Like Growth Factor Axis in the Human Thymus
  66. The Thymic Repertoire of Neuroendocrine-Related Self Antigens: Biological Role in T-Cell Selection and Pharmacological Implications
  67. Review Article Thymic Expression of Neuroendocrine Self‐Peptide Precursors: Role in T Cell Survival and Self‐Tolerance
  68. Cellular and Molecular Aspects of Thymic T‐Cell Education in Neuroendocrine Self Principles: Implications for Autoimmunitya
  69. The intrathymic expression of insulin-related genes: implications for pathophysiology and prevention of Type 1 diabetes
  70. Phosphorylation of Proteins Induced in a Murine Pre-T Cell Line by Neurohypophysial Peptides
  71. Neurohypophysial Peptides Stimulate the Phosphorylation of Pre-T Cell Focal Adhesion Kinases
  72. Effects of dexamethasone on the profile of cytokine secretion in human whole blood cell cultures
  73. Identification of neurotensin-related peptides in human thymic epithelial cell membranes and relationship with major histocompatibility complex class I molecules
  74. Increase in cytokine production (IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α but not IFN-γ, GM-CSF or LIF) by stimulated whole blood cells in postmenopausal osteoporosis
  75. Development of thymus autografts under the kidney capsule in the pig: A new “organ” for xenotransplantation
  76. Cytokine production by human thymic epithelial cells: control by the immune recognition of the neurohypophysial self-antigen
  77. Effects of exogenous IL-1β, TNFα, IL-6, IL-8 and LIF on cytokine production by human articular chondrocytes
  78. The thymic repertoire of neuroendocrine self-antigens: physiological implications in T-cell life and death
  79. Effects of ipriflavone and its metabolites on human articular chondrocytes cultivated in clusters
  80. Developmental and Evolutionary Aspects of Thymic T Cell Education to Neuroendocrine Self
  81. Neurophysins in Central Diabetes insipidus
  82. Increase in IL-1β, IL-6 and, TNF-α production in postmenopausal osteoporosis
  83. Messenger RNA expression for a TSH receptor variant in the thymus of a two-year-old child
  84. Cryptocrine signaling in the thymus network and T cell education to neuroendocrine self-antigens
  85. Neuroendocrine Hormones and the Immune System
  86. Cryptocrine Signaling in the Thymus Network.
  87. The immunological “self” of neuroendocrine protein families: Physiological implications
  88. Thymic Neuroendocrine Self Peptides and t Cell Selection
  89. Multiple ways to cellular immune tolerance
  90. The Dual Role of Thymic Neurohypophysial‐Related Self Peptides in T Cell Selection
  91. A great part of the neurohypophysial jigsaw puzzle has taken shape… and now?
  92. Thymic neurohypophysial-related peptides and T cell selection
  93. Horizons in Endocrinology
  94. La fonction centrale du thymus dans la reconnaissance des fonctions neuroendocrines par les lymphocytes T au cours de leur développement
  95. The thymic education of developing T cells in self neuroendocrine principles
  96. Thymic Neuropeptides and T‐Lymphocyte Developmenta
  97. T
  98. The Recognition of Hypothalamo-Neurohypophysial Functions by Developing T Cells
  99. At the cutting edge biosynthesis and paracrine/cryptocrine actions of ‘self’ neurohypophysial-related peptides in the thymus
  100. Monoclonal antibodies to oxytocin: production and characterization
  101. Expression of Preprotachykinin-A and Neuropeptide-Y Messenger RNA in the Thymus
  102. Cellular and Molecular Aspects of the Neuroendocrine-Immune Dialogue in T-Cell Differentiation
  103. Neurophysins as Markers of Vasopressin and Oxytocin Release
  104. Neuroendocrinology of the Thymus
  105. Modifications de la variation contingente negative (VCN) par l'ocytocine
  106. Inhibitory influence of oxytocin infusion on contingent negative variation and some memory tasks in normal men
  107. The Neurohormonal Thymic Microenvironment: Immunocytochemical Evidence that Thymic Nurse Cells Are Neuroendocrine Cells
  108. Inhibitory Action of Exogenous Oxytocin on Plasma Cortisol in Normal Human Subjects: Evidence of Action at the Adrenal Level
  109. The neuroendocrine thymus
  110. Neuroendocrine evaluation of catecholaminergic neurotransmission in mania
  111. Diagnostic performance of basal free cortisol/18-hydroxy-11-deoxycorticosterone (18-OH-DOC) ratio in endogenous depression: Comparison with the dexamethasone suppression test
  112. The Thymus as a Neuroendocrine Organ. Synthesis of Vasopressin and Oxytocin in Human Thymic Epitheliuma
  113. Confirmation of the inhibitory influence of exogenous oxytocin on cortisol and ACTH in man: Evidence of reproducibility
  114. Intranasal oxytocin in obsessive-compulsive disorder
  115. The neuroendocrine thymus: coexistence of oxytocin and neurophysin in the human thymus
  116. Dexamethasone Suppression Test and MMPI Scales
  117. Extrapyramidal Signs Following Zimelidine Overdose
  118. Extrapyramidal Signs Following Zimelidine Overdose
  119. Release of immunoreactive oxytocin and neurophysin I by cultured luteinizing bovine granulosa cells
  120. Diagnostic performance of the thirty-four hour dexamethasone suppression test
  121. Release of human neurophysin I during insulin-induced hypoglycemia in depressed patients is abolished after recovery with clomipramine treatment
  122. Oxytocin and neurophysin in cultures of bovine luteinizing granulosa cells and inverse relationship with progesterone synthesis
  123. Cerebrospinal fluid neurophysins in affective illness and in schizophrenia
  124. Dose-Response Relationship between Plasma Oxytocin and Cortisol and Adrenocorticotropin Concentrations during Oxytocin Infusion in Normal Men*