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Nadira Delhem

Researcher at university of lille

Publications -  66
Citations -  1318

Nadira Delhem is an academic researcher from university of lille. The author has contributed to research in topics: Immune system & Photodynamic therapy. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 56 publications receiving 1108 citations. Previous affiliations of Nadira Delhem include French Institute of Health and Medical Research & Pasteur Institute.

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Effect of Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma-Derived Exosomes on Human Regulatory T Cells

TL;DR: Interactions between NPC-Exo and Treg represent a newly defined mechanism that may be involved in regulating peripheral tolerance by tumors and in supporting immune evasion in human NPC.
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In Vitro Effects of Cyclosporine A and Tacrolimus on Regulatory T-Cell Proliferation and Function

TL;DR: Low doses of cyclosporine inhibit Treg activity, a finding that might explain the beneficial effect of this drug on hepatitis C recurrence, and by maintaining T Reg activity, tacrolimus could be more helpful than cyclospora in controlling rejection.
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Expression of hepatitis C virus NS5A natural mutants in a hepatocytic cell line inhibits the antiviral effect of interferon in a PKR-independent manner

TL;DR: The results support an important role of NS5A in controlling IFN‐α antiviral activity; they show, however, that PKR‐independent mechanisms are implicated, at least in liver‐derived cells.
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IL-23/IL-17A Axis Correlates with the Nitric Oxide Pathway in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Immunomodulatory Effect of Retinoic Acid

TL;DR: The study indicates that the IL-23/IL-17A axis plays a pivotal role in IBD pathogenesis through the NO pathway, and shows that both p-STAT3 and inducible NOS expression was upregulated in PBMCs and colonic mucosa, especially in patients with active CD.
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CCL18 differentiates dendritic cells in tolerogenic cells able to prime regulatory T cells in healthy subjects

TL;DR: This study is the first to define a chemokine able to generate tolerogenic DCs, however, this function was absent in allergic donors and may participate to the decreased tolerance observed in allergic diseases.