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Vincenzo Barnaba

Researcher at Sapienza University of Rome

Publications -  154
Citations -  8805

Vincenzo Barnaba is an academic researcher from Sapienza University of Rome. The author has contributed to research in topics: T cell & Cytotoxic T cell. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 152 publications receiving 7797 citations. Previous affiliations of Vincenzo Barnaba include Policlinico Umberto I & Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia.

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Guidelines for the use of flow cytometry and cell sorting in immunological studies (second edition)

Andrea Cossarizza, +462 more
TL;DR: These guidelines are a consensus work of a considerable number of members of the immunology and flow cytometry community providing the theory and key practical aspects offlow cytometry enabling immunologists to avoid the common errors that often undermine immunological data.
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Consensus guidelines for the detection of immunogenic cell death

Oliver Kepp, +81 more
- 29 Oct 2014 - 
TL;DR: Strategies conceived to detect surrogate markers of ICD in vitro and to screen large chemical libraries for putative I CD inducers are outlined, based on a high-content, high-throughput platform that was recently developed.
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Guidelines for the use of flow cytometry and cell sorting in immunological studies

Andrea Cossarizza, +246 more
TL;DR: A rapid search in PubMed shows that using "flow cytometry immunology" as a search term yields more than 68 000 articles, the first of which is not about lymphocytes as mentioned in this paper.
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Neutrophils efficiently cross-prime naive T cells in vivo

TL;DR: These data are the first demonstration that neutrophils cross-prime CD8+ T cells in vivo and suggest that they may constitute, together with professional antigen-presenting cells, an attractive target to induce cytotoxic T Cells in vaccines.
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Hepatic expansion of a virus-specific regulatory CD8+ T cell population in chronic hepatitis C virus infection

TL;DR: This study provides for the first time to the authors' knowledge direct evidence of the existence of virus-specific CD8(+) T(R) cells that infiltrate the livers of patients with chronic HCV infection, identifies IL-10 as a soluble inhibitory factor mediating suppression, and suggests that these cells play a pivotal role in controlling hepatic effector CD8 (+) T cell responses.