“This data highlights that the neonatal immune system can be affected by maternal state even in the absence of direct infection of the baby, said Deena Gibbons from King’s College London.”This opens up many avenues of research and suggest that other maternal factors may be capable of changing foetal immune system development,” said Gibbons, the corrosponding author of the study.Sarah Gee, first author of the paper and a PhD student at King’s College London, noted that it will be interesting to know whether these immune changes allow the neonate to make better responses to subsequent infections after birth.
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Parliamentary panel calls for CSIR-IGIB–Tata Memorial collaboration to tackle rising cancer burden in North-East India
Under the rare disease diagnostic programme, the committee commended IGIB for developing India’s first indigenous CRISPR-based gene therapy…

