People who live with obesity are "tagging" a memory of being overweight on a key part of the immune system—leaving people ...
Memory cells in the nose slow the influenza virus as soon as it enters the body. They reduce viral levels and may help ...
Scientists at Cincinnati Children's have identified how certain immune cells are molecularly programmed to respond faster when the body encounters a familiar threat, shedding light on immune memory ...
A study has found that even after obese patients lose weight, the "obesity memory" imprinted in their immune cells persists ...
However, details of the intervening steps, as researchers have learned in the past 65 years, are quite complex — certain cells carry the flu antigen to the immune system, specific immune cells respond ...
A protein in the brain called FTL1 may accelerate aging and affect memory, paving the way for new therapies in the future ...
Even when immune memory cells form in the lung after influenza infection, insufficient dietary iron leaves them less able to mount a strong antiviral response, revealing how nutrition can shape ...