Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A

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Last updated 08 novembro 2024
Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A
Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A
Secretory Immunoglobulin - an overview
Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A
Frontiers The Role of IgA in Chronic Upper Airway Disease: Friend or Foe?
Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A
Crosstalk between sIgA-Coated Bacteria in Infant Gut and Early-Life Health: Trends in Microbiology
Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A
Microorganisms, Free Full-Text
Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A
Uses of immunoglobulin A in the control of the infectious diseases
Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A
Mechanisms and evidence of vertical transmission of infections in pregnancy including SARS‐CoV‐2s - Mahyuddin - 2020 - Prenatal Diagnosis - Wiley Online Library
Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A
Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A coated trace bacterial variants from the mother to infant gut through breastfeeding - Food & Function (RSC Publishing) DOI:10.1039/D2FO01244H
Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A
Recombinant Human Secretory IgA Induces Salmonella Typhimurium Agglutination and Limits Bacterial Invasion into Gut-Associated Lymphoid Tissues
Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A
Frontiers The Mucosal and Serological Immune Responses to the Novel Coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) Vaccines
Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A
Frontiers Secretory IgA: Designed for Anti-Microbial Defense
Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A
Immunoglobulin A, Review
Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A
Immunoglobulin A Antibody - an overview
Widespread vertical transmission of secretory immunoglobulin A
Full article: Defensins, lectins, mucins, and secretory immunoglobulin A: microbe-binding biomolecules that contribute to mucosal immunity in the human gut

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