Health / Medical Topics |
T-Lymphocyte Activation Antigen CD86
T-lymphocyte activation antigen CD86 (329 aa, ~38 kDa) is encoded by the human CD86 gene. This protein plays a role in signal transduction that mediates T-cell proliferation and interleukin gene transcription. (NCI Thesaurus)
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
A thymocyte-derived lymphocyte of immunological importance that is long-lived (months to years) and is responsible for cell-mediated immunity. T lymphocyte cells form…
A type of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in which too many T-cell lymphoblasts (immature white blood cells) are found in the lymph nodes and…
A type of leukemia in which large T lymphocytes (a type of white blood cell) that contain granules (small particles) are found…
A T-lymphocyte that has been transformed (activated) in response to antigenic stimulation. It will give rise to a population of T cells…
A drug used to treat HER2-positive breast cancer that has spread to other parts of the body. It is used in patients…
A probability distribution that arises in the problem of estimating the mean of a normally distributed population when the sample size is…