Immunology and cell biology publication of the Year Award 2009
Date
2010
Authors
Parish, Christopher
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
As in previous years, it is a great pleasure to announce the
Immunology and Cell Biology Publication of the Year Award.
Recipients of the award must be a first author on one of the following
ICB manuscript categories: Original Article, Outstanding Observation,
Theoretical Article or Brief Communication. They must also be a
financial member of the Australasian Society for Immunology (ASI)
by October of the year in which the article was published. The award is
a AU$1000 scholarship provided by the Nature Publishing Group.
This year a small committee, consisting of the Editor-in-Chief and
Deputy Editor of ICB, and the current ASI Vice President selected the
best article based on scientific excellence. I am pleased to announce
that Dr Cindy Ma was chosen by the committee as the winner
of the 2009 ICB Publication of the Year Award. The winning paper
of Dr Ma, which is an Outstanding Observation, is entitled ‘Early
commitment of naı¨ve human CD4+ T cells to the T follicular helper
(TFH) cell lineage is induced by IL-12’ and was published in the
November/December 2009 issue of ICB.
1 TFH cells are a subset of
CD4+ T cells that localize in B-cell follicles and have a key role in the
development of antibody responses. Despite their importance in
humoral immunity, little is known about the factors that favour
TFH cell development. The award winning paper of Dr Ma clearly
shows that in humans, interleukin (IL)-12, presumably produced by
dendritic cells during early stages of CD4+ T-cell activation, has a key
role in TFH cell induction. Earlier studies in mice have indicated that
mouse TFH cells do not require IL-12 for their development. Dr Ma’s
research thus indicates that human TFH cells behave differently from
their mouse counterparts, a finding with important therapeutic
implications.
Description
Keywords
interleukin 12, CD4+ T lymphocyte, gene mutation, lymphoproliferative disease, medical education, medical literature, medical research, Allergy and Immunology, Awards and Prizes
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Source
Immunology and Cell Biology
Type
Journal article
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Access Statement
Free Access via publisher website
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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