A new study presents novel findings on why human lymph nodes lose their function with age and the consequences for the effectiveness of our immune system. A new study from researchers at Uppsala ...
By careful analysis of more than 200 lymph nodes, Maria Ulvmar's group demonstrates that lipomatosis begins in the central part of the lymph node, known as the medulla, and presents evidence linking ...
Single-cell atlases mapping immune cells provide hints on how immune cells mature, attenuate, and disseminate throughout the body but lack information on spatiotemporal relationships between these ...
By careful analysis of more than 200 lymph nodes, Maria Ulvmar’s group demonstrates that lipomatosis begins in the central part of the lymph node, known as the medulla, and presents evidence linking ...
Lymph nodes normally serve as the headquarters of our immune system. When we get an infection or are vaccinated, the lymph nodes are the sites where the immune cells congregate, are activated and ...