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A life of adventure in immunobiology.

Immunology (2010) PMID 19968560

This article outlines my early start in medicine, a late start in immunology research, and my efforts to integrate the two activities. I first describe some of the background information, excitement, and implications of the recognition of T and B cells as separate but functionally intertwined arms of the adaptive immune system. The article continues with a brief account of my colleagues' and my efforts to use the model of hematopoietic stem cell differentiation along T and B cell lines to gain a better understanding of immunodeficiency diseases and lymphoid malignancies. It concludes with the discovery of a more ancient adaptive immune system in which T-like and B-like cells in jawless vertebrates use variable lymphocyte receptors constructed with leucine-rich-repeat sequences to recognize antigens.

DOI: 10.1146/annurev-immunol-030409-101248
Version: za2963e q8za1 q8zb1 q8zc1 q8zdd q8ze8 q8zf5 q8zg9

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