释义 |
chemokineenUK
che·mo·kine C0272050 (kē′mō-kīn′, kĕm′ō-)n. Any of various chemotactic cytokines that are released by several cell types and act to attract monocytes, neutrophils, and other white blood cells to sites of injury or inflammation. [chemo- + (cyto)kine.]chemokine (ˈkiːməʊˌkaɪn) na type of protein produced during inflammation that activates white blood cellschemokineenUK
chemokine[′kē·mə‚kīn] (cell and molecular biology) A small (7-14 kilodaltons of soluble protein) chemoattractant cytokine produced by cells and tissues at the beginning of an immune system response to infection, allergen, injury, and so forth that controls the nature and magnitude of immune cell infiltration and inflammation at the affected site. chemokineenUK
chemokine (kē′mō-kīn′, kĕm′ō-)n. Any of various cytokines produced in acute and chronic inflammation that mobilize and activate white blood cells.CCL1 A gene on chromosome 17q12 that encodes a protein structurally related to the CXC subfamily of cytokines, which are characterised by two cysteines separated by a single amino acid. CCL1 is secreted by activated T cells and is chemotactic for monocytes but not neutrophils; it binds to chemokine receptor CCR8. |