Anthropometry
Anthropometry (Greek ανθρωπος, man, and μετρον, measure, literally meaning "measurement of humans"), in physical anthropology, refers to the measurement of living human individuals for the purposes of understanding human physical variation.
- Anthropometric tools
- Arrangement of the somatotypes according to rarity
- Auxology
- Biometrics and biostatistics
- Cephalic Index and Physical Anthropology
- Dermatoglyphics
- Digit ratio
- Ectomorphic
- Endomorphic
- Genetic and environmental influences on somatotype components
- George Draper
- Gonial angle and Subcostal angle
- Harold Cummins
- Mesomorphic
- Morphometrics
- Somatogram
- Somatotype
- Subtle bilateral variation
- Trunk Index (TI)
- Visible body characteristics
- William Sheldon
Archaeogenetics
Archaeogenetics refers to the application of the techniques of molecular population genetics to the study of the human past. The topic has its origins in the study of human blood groups and the realisation that this classical genetic marker provides information about linguistic and ethnic groupings. Early work in this field included that of Ludwik and Hanka Hirszfeld, William Boyd and Arthur Mourant. From the 1960s onwards, Luca Cavalli-Sforza used classical genetic markers to examine the prehistoric population of Europe, culminating in the publication of The History and Geography of Human Genes in 1994.
- Atlantic Modal Haplotype (AMH)
- Bering Straits Bottleneck
- Carleton S. Coon
- Demic diffusion
- Genealogical DNA testing
- HapMap
- Haplogroup A (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup A (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup B (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup B (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup C (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup C (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup D (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup D (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup E3a (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup E3b (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup E (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup F (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup F (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup G (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup H (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup H (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup I (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup I (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup J2 (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup JT (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup J (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup J (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup K (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup K (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup L1 (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup L2 (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup L3 (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup L (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup M (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup M (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup N (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup N (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup O3 (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup O (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup P (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup Q3 (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup Q (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup R1a1 (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup R1b (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup R2 (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup R (Y-DNA)
- Haplogroup R (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup T (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup U (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup V (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup W (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup X (mtDNA)
- Haplogroup Z (mtDNA)
- Haplogroups
- Haplotype
- Map of human migrations by haplogroup
- Mitochrondrial DNA Haplogroups
- Multiregional Hypothesis
- Polygenism
- Serial founder effect
- Short tandem repeat (STR)
- Teleology
- Y-chromosome P49a,f.TaqI haplotypes
- Y chromosome SNP markers
Biochemistry
Biochemistry is the study of the chemistry of life, a bridge between biology and chemistry that studies how complex chemical reactions give rise to life. It is a hybrid branch of chemistry which specialises in the chemical processes in living organisms.
- Agonist
- Alanine
- Amine
- Arginine
- Argininosuccinate synthase
- Asparagine
- Aspartic acid
- Biogenic amine
- Biogenic substance
- Cadaverine
- Catecholamines
- Co Enzyme A
- Cortisol
- Cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)
- Cysteine
- Cysteine metabolism
- Cystine
- Dimer
- Dopamine Beta-Hydroxylase (DBH)
- Epinephrine
- Eukaryote
- Factor VIII
- G-protein-coupled receptors
- Glutathione
- Histidine
- Indole
- Janus kinase (JAK)
- Ligand
- Lysine
- Methylation
- N-acetyl muramic acid
- Nitric Oxide
- Ornithine decarboxylase
- Oxidative stress
- Phosphodiesterase (PDE)
- Polyamines
- Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs)
- Prokaryote
- Proline
- Putrescine
- Receptor
- Receptor antagonist
- Second messengers
- Serine
- Skatole
- Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
- Spermidine
- Spermine
- Threonine
- Toxin
- Tryptamine
- Valine
- Von Willebrand factor (vWF)
- Xenobiotics
- Zeta-potential
Concepts
A concept is an abstract idea or a mental symbol, typically associated with a corresponding representation in language or symbology, that denotes all of the objects in a given category or class of entities, events, phenomena, or relationships between them.
- Arithmetric Mean
- Bimodal distribution
- Cladistics
- Complex Systems
- Eigenvalue, eigenvector and eigenspace
- Evidence-based medicine
- Hayflick limit
- Holism
- Lethal Dose (LD50)
- Maximum parsimony
- Median
- Neoteny
- Normal Distribution
- Ontogeny
- Phyletic gradualism
- Phylogenetics
- Principal components analysis (PCA)
- Punctuated equilibrium
- Recapitulation theory
- Scientific reductionism
- Simillimum
- Spandrel
- Standard Deviation
- Stochastic
- Uniformitarianism
Genomics
Genomics is the study of an organism's genome and the use of the genes. It deals with the systematic use of genome information, associated with other data, to provide answers in biology, medicine, and industry.
Genomics has the potential of offering new therapeutic methods for the treatment of some diseases, as well as new diagnostic methods. Other applications are in the food and agriculture sectors. The major tools and methods related to genomics are bioinformatics, genetic analysis, measurement of gene expression, and determination of gene function.
- A.W.F. Edwards
- ABO and Secretor Blood group Genetics
- Adenine
- Allele
- Amorph
- Autosomal dominant
- Base pair
- CREB Proteins
- Canalisation
- Centromere
- Charles Darwin
- Chromatin
- Chromosome
- Co-dominance
- Codon
- Conrad Hal Waddington
- Copy number polymorphisms
- CpG sites
- Cytosine
- DNA methyltransferase
- DRD2 (Dopamine Receptor D2) Gene
- DRD4 (Dopamine Receptor D4) Gene
- Dawkins, Richard
- Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
- Dicer
- Differentiation, cellular
- Epigenetics
- Epistasis
- Exon
- FOX proteins
- Fisher-Race Theory of Rhesus Inheritance
- Fitness
- Five prime untranslated region (5' UTR)
- Founder effect
- Functome
- GDF1 growth differentiation factor 1
- G Quartet oligonucleotides
- Gene
- Gene-environment interaction
- Gene conservation
- Genetic architecture
- Genetic drift
- Genetic linkage
- Genetic polymorphisms in dietary xenobiotic metabolizing enzymes
- Genetics, Resources
- Genome
- Genomic control of determination of bilateral symmetry in Homo sapiens.
- Genomic control of left-right symmetry in Homo sapiens.
- Genomic control of pattern recognition
- Genotype
- Guanine
- Hardy-Weinberg Principle
- Histone
- Histone deacetylases (HDAC)
- Histone methyltransferases (HMT)
- Homeobox (Hox) Gene
- INSIG1 (Insulin Induced Gene 1)
- INSIG2 (Insulin Induced Gene 2)
- Inheritance
- Intron
- J.B.S Haldane
- Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck (Lamarckism)
- Linkage disequilibrium
- Locus
- MAOA (monoamine oxidase A)
- Maternal effect
- Mendelian inheritance
- Mesoderm
- Mitochondrial DNA
- Mitochondrial genetics
- Motoo Kimura
- Multivariate statistics
- Mutation
- NEUROD2 (Neurogenic Differentiation 2)
- Natural selection
- Neutral theory of molecular evolution
- Nucleotide
- Okazaki Fragments
- Open reading frame
- Paedomorphic variations
- Phenotype
- Phenotypic plasticity
- Pleiotropy
- Ploidy
- Proteasome
- Purine
- Pyrimidine
- Quantitative trait locus analysis
- R.A. Fisher
- R.C. Lewontin
- RNA (ribonucleic acid)
- RNA Interference (RNAi)
- STAT3 signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (acute-phase response factor)
- STAT Protein
- Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs)
- Stem cell
- Stephen Jay Gould
- Synonymous (silent) substitution
- TEP1 telomerase-associated protein 1
- Telomerase
- Telomere
- Thymine
- Trait
- Transcription (DNA transcription)
- Transcription factors
- Transcriptome
- Translation (RNA translation)
- Transposon
- UMOD uromodulin (uromucoid, Tamm-Horsfall glycoprotein)
- Ubiquitin
- Uracil
- Wiener Theory of Rhesus Inheritance
- Wild type
- Y chromosome analysis
- Zinc finger
Glycomics
Glycomics, or glycobiology is a discipline of biology that deals with the structure and function of oligosaccharides (chains of sugars). The term glycomics is derived from the chemical prefix for sweetness or a sugar, "glyco-", and was formed to follow the naming convention established by genomics (which deals with genes) and proteomics (which deals with proteins). The identity of the entirety of carbohydrates in an organism is thus collectively referred to as the glycome.
- Aberrent glycosylation in malignant and pre-malignant states
- Aberrent glycosylation in rheumatoid arthritis
- Aglycone
- Albert Neuberger
- Amino Sugar
- Carbohydrate
- Carbohydrates as Biological Markers
- Flavonoid glycosides
- Forssman antigen
- Fucoidan
- Fucose
- Fucosyltransferases
- Galactose
- Glucuronic acid
- Glycans
- Glycation
- Glycobiology
- Glycocalyx
- Glycoconjugates
- Glycodelin
- Glycolipids
- Glycome
- Glycone
- Glycophorin
- Glycoproteins
- Glycosaminoglycans
- Glycosidases
- Glycoside
- Glycosphingolipid
- Glycosylation
- Glycosyltransferase
- Indican
- MUC1 Mucin
- Mannose
- Monosaccharide
- Mucin
- N-acetylgalactosamine
- N-acetylglucosamine
- N-linked glycosylation
- O-linked glycosylation
- Oligosaccharide
- Primary and secondary ABH glycosides
- Proteoglycan
- Sialogens
- Sialyltransferases
- Tamm-Horsfall glycoprotein
- Thrombospondins
Immunology
The branch of biomedicine concerned with the structure and function of the immune system, innate and acquired immunity, the bodily distinction of self from nonself, and laboratory techniques involving the interaction of antigens with specific antibodies.
- Allergens, Dietary
- Allergy
- Anoikia
- Antigen
- Antigen, ABH
- Apoptosis
- Aquired B Phenotype
- Atopy
- Autoimmunity
- Basophils and Mast Cells
- Blastogenesis
- Blood
- Blood Group Glycoconjugates in Nanomedicine
- Cell mediated immunity
- Chemokines
- Chemotaxis
- Clotting factors
- Complement System
- Cytokines
- Cytolysis
- Endotoxin
- Epitope
- Erythrocyte
- Flagellin
- Growth Factors
- Hapten
- Histamine
- Horror autotoxicus
- Human Leukocyte Antigens (HLA)
- Humoral Immunity
- I(i) Antigens
- Immune complex
- Intercellular adhesion molecules (ICAMs)
- Interferon
- Interleukin-1 (IL-1)
- Interleukin-2 (IL-2)
- Interleukin-4 (IL-4)
- Interleukin-5 (IL-5)
- Interleukin-6 (IL-6)
- Interleukin-7 (IL-7)
- Interleukin-8 (IL-8)
- Interleukins
- Kupffer cell
- Macrophage
- Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC)
- Membrane Attack Complex (MAC)
- Mitogen
- Mitosis
- Monocyte
- Monocyte colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF)
- Mucosal Immune Response
- Mucus (Mucous)
- Myeloperoxidase
- Natural Killer (NK) Cells
- Neuraminic acid
- Neuraminidase
- Nuclear Factor kappa B (NF-kB)
- Opsonization
- Pattern recognition receptors
- Paul Ehrlich
- Peptidoglycan
- Phagocytosis
- Platelets
- Reticuloendothelial system
- Schwartzman Phenomenon (Schwartzman Reaction)
- T Helper Lymphocyte
- T lymphocyte
- Toll-like receptors (TLRs)
- Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF)
- Tumor Necrosis Factor alpha (TNFa)
- Type 1 hypersensitivity
Lectinology
The study of lectins. The hour of birth of "lectinology" may be defined as the description of the agglutinating properties of ricin, by Herrmann Stillmark in 1888, however, the modern era of lectinology began almost 100 years later in 1972 with the purification of different plant lectins by Sharon and Lis. The idea to use lectins for drug delivery came in 1988 from Woodley and Naisbett, who proposed the use of tomato lectin to target the luminal surface of the small intestine.
- Adhesins
- Agglutinate
- Agglutination, Mixed Field
- Boyd's Report of Lectin Specificity
- C-Reactive Protein
- Cadherins
- Catenin
- Cell Adhesion Molecules (CAMs)
- Collectins
- Dietary lectins are metabolic signals for the gut and modulate immune and hormone functions
- Dietary lectins can induce in vitro release of IL-4 and IL-13 from human basophils
- Galectin 3, hGal-3
- Galectins
- Gerhard Uhlenbruck
- Herrmann Stillmark
- Integrins
- Joseph Charles Aub
- LECster Lectin Database
- Lectins
- Lectins, Mitogen and Blastogenic Effects
- Lectins, Resistance to Degradation
- Lectins, induced changes in intestinal permeability
- Mannan-binding lectin (MBL)
- Nathan Sharon
- Natural human antibodies to dietary lectins
- Ricin
- Selectins
- Siglecs
- William Boyd
Linguistics
Linguistics is scholarly study of the languages and cultures of the peoples of the world. It embraces the cultural, historical, and philological aspects of language study, including the analyses of texts and discourse; studies of semantic systems and cultural classifications and the analysis of linguistic prehistory and genetic classification.
- Dravidian language family
- FOXP2 (forkhead box P2)
- Indo-European languages
- Joseph H. Greenberg
- Main groups of languages spoken in Africa
- Mass lexical comparison
- Nilo-Saharan languages
Lipidomics
Lipidomics is the large-scale study of non-water-soluble metabolites (lipids). Key technologies used in lipidomics research include electrospray ionization, mass spectrometry and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Lipids represent key signaling molecules which control, or are (bio)-markers of, physiological and disease processes. They are also key structural components of cellular membranes. Lipidomics is thus a subset of metabolomics that aims to detect and quantify all lipid species within a biological sample
- Cholesterol and triglyceride levels, ABO blood groups and secretor status
- Eicosanoid
- Hypercholesterolemia (Elevated cholesterol) and ABO, Rh and MN Blood Groups
- Intestinal Alkaline Phosphatase (IAP)
- Leukotrienes
- Prostacyclin
- Prostaglandins
- Sphingolipids
- Thromboxanes
Metabolomics
Metabolomics is defined as the "systematic study of the unique chemical fingerprints that specific cellular processes leave behind" - specifically, the study of their small-molecule metabolite profiles.
Nutrigenomics
Nutrigenomics (nutritional genomics) is the application of the sciences of genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics and metabolomics to human nutrition, especially the relationship between nutrition and health. Nutrition and health research is focussed on the prevention of disease by optimising and maintaining cellular, tissue, organ and whole-body homeostasis. Nutrigenomics is associated with the issue of personalized nutrition, since claims are being made that differences in genotype should result in differences in the diet and health relationship.
- 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR)
- Apolipoprotein A-I (APOA1), Apolipoprotein A-4 (APOA4),
- Apolipoprotein E (APOE)
- Biochemical Individuality
- Calcium binding atopy related auto-antigen 1 (CBARA1)
- ENPP1 (ectonucleotide pyrophosphatase-phosphodiesterase 1)
- FOXO1
- FUT2
- FUT3
- GATA-binding protein 3 (GATA3)
- Genetically modified food
- Genetotrophic Concept
- Institute for Human Individuality
- Leptin (LEP, obesity homolog)
- MC1R melanocortin 1 receptor (alpha melanocyte stimulating hormone receptor)
- Neuropeptide Y
- Proteome
- Proteomics
- Roger Williams
- SIRT1
- Subset of likely Type 2 diabetes genes
- Uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1, mitochondrial, proton carrier)
- Uncoupling protein 2 (UCP2)
- p53
Paleoserology
A branch of anthropology that is concerned with the characteristics of ancient environments and with their relationships to immunologic and hematologic function. The anthropological uses of the serological discoveries began as an effort to find a more scientific definition of race based on differing distribution of blood types. By 1940 and after several hundred studies that tested over a million subjects, researchers failed in achieving this goal. The data produced, how ever, were largely the basis for the development of human population genetics in the late 1930s and 1940s which redefined humans into gene pools instead of races.
- A.E. Mourant
- ABH secretion and natural selection
- AB Isogenes
- Asimov, Isaac
- Average linkage tree (classical methods)
- Blood Groups, Races and People
- Blood Groups and Anthropology
- Blood group determinations of prehistoric American Indians
- Boyd and Asimov's classification of the major clines by blood type
- Clines
- Cro-Magnon
- Distribution of ABO Blood Groups
- Distribution of M and N blood groups
- First Principle Component (PC1)
- Frank Livingstone
- Frequencies of blood groups O, A, B, and AB in typical populations
- Hirszfeld and Hirszfeld, 1919
- Human blood groups and anthropology
- Impressions of racial differences influenced by ancillary factors
- Ludwik Hirszfeld
- Luigi Cavalli-Sforza
- Natural Selection in Man, The ABO(H) Blood Group System
- Neolithic
- Paleolithic
- Pestilence, diet, natural selection, and the distribution of microbial and human blood group antigens and antibodies
- Race as a taxonomic construct
- Racial and Ethnic Distribution of ABO Blood Types
- Related blood group factors in animals
- Subgroups of A and AB in Various Populations (Arranged in order of increasing ratio A2 to A1)
- The Genetic legacy of paleolithic Homo sapiens in extant Europeans
Pathology
The scientific study of the nature of disease and its causes, processes, development, and consequences. Also called pathobiology. The anatomic or functional manifestations of a disease: the pathology of cancer.
- 'A-Like' tumor antigens
- Affective Disorders and ABO Blood Groups
- Alcoholism and Secretor Status
- Allergy, ABO Blood Group and Secretor Status
- Behavior Patterns and ABO Blood Groups
- Birth Defects and ABO Blood Groups
- Blood groups and reproductive disorders
- Cancer and ABO blood groups
- Candida Albicans Infection, ABO and Secretor Blood Groups
- Carcinogen
- Cardiovascular disease, ABO blood groups and secretor status
- Celiac Disease (Sprue), ABO and Secretor Blood Types
- Diathesis-stress model
- Disease and ABO blood groups
- Endothelial dysfunction
- Environmental Allergies and ABO Blood Groups
- Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency
- Grave's Disease and secretor status
- Helicobacter pylori infection, ABO and secretor blood groups
- Influenza, ABO, MN and other polymorphisms
- Ischemic heart disease and ABO Blood Groups
- Longevity
- Multifactorial
- Otitis (ear) infection and ABO blood groups
- Otitis media (ear infection) and ABO Blood Groups
- Peripheral artery disease and ABO Blood Groups
- Rhesus Blood Group and Hearing Loss
- Shigella Infection and ABO Blood Groups
- Sialic acid and sialyltransferase dysfunction in breast cancer
- Single Gene Disorders
- Somatotypes and association with disease
Pharmacology
Pharmacology (in Greek: pharmacon (φάρμακον) meaning drug, and logos (λόγος) meaning science) is the study of how chemical substances interact with living systems. If substances have medicinal properties, they are considered pharmaceuticals. The field encompasses drug composition and properties, interactions, toxicology, therapy, and medical applications and antipathogenic capabilities.
- Anti-adhesion therapy
- Arabinoglactan
- Carnosine
- Drug metabolism
- Fucus vesiculosis (Bladderwrack)
- Inhibition of P-glycoprotein by natural products
- Iscador (Viscum, Mistletoe)
- Quercetin
- Resveratrol
- Saponins
- Soyasaponins
Physiology
Physiology (in Greek physis = nature and logos = word) is the study of the mechanical, physical, and biochemical functions of living organisms.
- Alpha 1-antitrypsin (A1AT)
- Cytochrome P450 oxidase
- Endocytosis
- Endothelin
- Endothelium
- Epidermal Growth Factor (EGF)
- Gastrin
- Homeostasis
- Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA axis)
- Microvilli
- Mitochondria
- Mucosa
- Pepsin
- Phase II metabolism
- Phase I metabolism
- Portal circulation
- Serine proteases
- Serpins
- Signal transduction
- Villi
- Zymogen
Polymorphism
The occurrence of different forms, stages, or types in individual organisms or in organisms of the same species, independent of sexual variations. Polymorphism literally means 'having many forms.'
- 19q13.3
- 9q34
- ABCG2 gene polymorphisms
- ABH antigens and cell differentiation
- ABO Blood Group
- ABO Polymorphism and embryogenesis
- ALDH2 polymorphism
- Acetylator phenotype
- Bacterial degradation of blood group antigens
- Blood Group Antigens as Markers of Differentiation
- Blood Group Antigens as a Self-Declaration Mechanism
- Blood Groups of Offspring Possible or Impossible from any Mating Combination
- Blood group antigen proteins (chart)
- Carbohydrate components of human milk and secretor types
- Chido Rodgers blood group system
- Colton blood group
- Cortisol and Catecholamine Response Differs By ABO Group
- Diego blood group system
- Dopamine Beta Hydroxylase and ABO Groups
- Duffy blood group system
- E. Coli Infection and ABO Blood Groups
- Ear Cerumen Polymorphism
- Fatty acid binding protein 2 (FABP-2) polymorphism
- Gc plasma system
- Gerbich blood group system
- Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase system (G6PD)
- Glutathione S-transferase polymorphism
- H-h blood group system
- Hemorheology and ABO blood groups
- I Blood Group System
- Insulin resistance and Lewis phenotypes
- Kell Blood Group
- Kidd Blood Group System
- Lewis Blood Group
- Lewis antigens
- MNS Blood Group
- Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) polymorphism
- Mid digital hair
- Occurrence of A and B Antigens in the Human Body Outside of the Erythrocytes
- PDK4 pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase, isozyme 4 polymorphism
- PROP and PTC Taster Polymorphisms
- P (P1, P2) Blood Group
- P glycoprotein and ABO blood group
- P glycoprotein and MDR polymorphism
- Paraoxonase 2 (PON2) polymorphism
- Reduced platelet MAO activity in healthy male students with blood group O
- Rheology
- Rhesus (Rh) Blood Group
- Secretor Status
- Serum gastrin concentrations and ABO blood group
- Serum pepsinogen levels and ABO blood groups
- Sialyl Lewis X (SLeX)
- Stress and ABO Blood Groups
- Subgroups of Type A
- Subgroups of Type B
- The hemoglobins
- The malate dehydrogenase system
- The phosphoglycerate kinase system
- The protease inhibitor system
- The red-cell acid phosphatase system
- The thalassemias
- Thymidylate synthase (TS) polymorphism
- Trp64Arg polymorphism of the beta3-adrenergic receptor gene
- Weak blood group A and B phenotypes
References
These are the individual scientific abstracts and references that are included within the specific pertinent topics.
- A search for association between gene markers and serum cholesterol, triglyceride, urate and blood pressure.
- Association analysis of common variants of STAT6, GATA3, and STAT4 to asthma and high serum IgE phenotypes.
- Association between secretor status and respiratory viral illness
- Association of Lewis blood group phenotypes with urinary tract infection in children
- Associations between atopic diseases and the polymorphic systems ABO, Kidd, Inv and red cell acid phosphatase
- Blood groups and affective disorders
- Blood groups and diabetes mellitus. A possible tool in the analysis of the hereditary background of diabetes mellitus
- Blood pressure and blood group markers. Association with the MN locus
- Carbohydrate antigens sialyl Lewis A and sialyl Lewis X and adhesion of human cancer cells to vascular endothelium
- Carbohydrates in protein. The carbohydrate component of crystalline egg albumin
- Changes in cell surface antigen expressions during proliferation and differentiation of human erythroid progenitors
- Chemokines and innate immunity
- Diet, Helicobacter pylori, and p53 mutations in gastric cancer. A molecular epidemiology study in Italy
- Dietary antioxidants and paraoxonases against LDL oxidation and atherosclerosis development
- Effect of herbal melanin on IL-8. A possible role of Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4)
- Effect of photo-oxidation on isohemagglutinating antibodies
- Effects of a lectin- and a viscotoxin-rich mistletoe preparation on clinical and hematologic parameters
- Essential difference between the two optimum proportions flocculation ratios
- Fatty acid binding protein 2 (FABP-2) polymorphism, obesity and insulin resistance
- Genes, peoples, and languages
- Genetic interactions with diet influence the risk of cardiovascular disease
- Genetic polymorphism of interleukin-8 (IL-8) is associated with Helicobacter pylori-induced duodenal ulcer
- Glycosylation alterations of cells in late phase apoptosis from colon carcinomas
- H3N2 Influenza and ABO blood groups
- H blood types in pigs as predictors of stress susceptibility
- History of lectins, from hemagglutinins to biological recognition molecules
- Human genetic affinities for Y-chromosome P49a,f.TaqI haplotypes show strong correspondence with linguistics
- Importance of lectins for the prevention of bacterial infections and cancer metastases
- Influence of character of antibody upon velocity of floculation
- Inhibitory activity of blood group antigens M and N in inhibition of virus influenza hemagglutination
- Lectins in the United States Diet
- Lewis blood group phenotype as an independent risk factor for coronary heart disease
- MN and Jk systems influence environmental variability in serum lipid levels
- Mechanism of human SIRT1 activation by resveratrol
- On the mechanism of specific precipitation
- Palmar dermatoglyphics in mongolism
- Pathology of fatal human infection associated with avian influenza A H5N1 virus
- Polymorphisms in the fatty acid-binding protein 2 and apolipoprotein C-III genes,metabolic syndrome and dyslipidemia
- Reactions of normal and leukemic cell surfaces to a wheat germ agglutinin
- Reactions of normal and leukemic cell surfaces to a wheat germ agglutinin II
- Reactions of normal and tumor cell surfaces to enzymes, I. wheat-germ lipase and associated mucopolysaccharides
- Separation of Individuals of Any Blood Group into Secretors and Non-Secretors by Use of a Plant Agglutinin (Lectin)
- Specificity of isoagglutinin response following injection of group substances into group O individuals
- Study on the inhibition of alpha-glucosidase by soyasaponins
- Tanshinone IIA from Salvia miltiorrhiza inhibits inducible NO synthase, TNF-alpha, IL-1beta and IL-6
- The C282Y mutation may have been positively selected as it mitigates the infertility of celiac disease
- The Thomsen-Friedenreich (TF) receptor. an old history with new mystery
- The composition of specific precipitates in the region of antigen excess
- The effects of high pressure on hemagglutinating antibodies
- The inhibitory effect of quercetin on IL-6 production by LPS-stimulated neutrophils
- The role of FABP2 gene polymorphism in alcoholic cirrhosis
- The role of adhesion molecules in atherosclerosis
- Trp64Arg polymorphism, body composition, insulin resistance and bioimpedance (BIA)
- Y chromosomal haplogroup J as a signature of the post-neolithic colonization of Europe
Serology
Serology is a medical blood test to detect the presence of antibodies, such as antibodies produced against the envelope antigen of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). A serology may be performed when an infection is suspected. There are several serology techniques that can be used depending on the suspected antibodies. Serology techniques include agglutination, precipitation, complement-fixation and fluorescent antibodies..
- ABO Antibodies
- ABO bias in natural immunity
- Agglutinin
- Alexander Wiener
- Alexandre Mikhailovich Besredka
- Alternate Complement Pathway
- Antibody
- Antibody afinity and avidity
- Flocculation
- Gruber-Durham reaction
- Herbert Edward Durham
- Immuno-diffusion
- Immunoglobulin A
- Immunoglobulin E
- Immunoglobulin G
- Immunoglobulin M
- Immunoglobulins
- Interpretation of agglutination reactions
- Isohemagglutinin Titer
- Isohemagglutinins
- Jan Jansky
- Karl Landsteiner
- Max von Gruber
- Neo-Springerism
- Optimum Proportions Determination (Flocculation Optima)
- Precipitin
- Radial Immunodiffusion (Mancini)
- Reuben Ottenberg
- Robert Russell Race and Ruth Sanger
- Rouleaux Formation
- Thomsen-Friedenreich (T-Tn) antigen