| 释义 | 
		Definition of immune response in English: immune responsenoun The reaction of the cells and fluids of the body to the presence of a substance which is not recognized as a constituent of the body itself.  Example sentencesExamples -  Many different chemicals that are used in the immune response can now be made in the laboratory.
 -  They will be looking for cell properties that may contribute to the faulty immune response found in lupus.
 -  We now have the ability to isolate those cells in a person's body that are necessary to generate an immune response.
 -  Ebola virus kills quickly, giving the body little time to launch an effective immune response.
 -  They then migrate to lymph nodes to initiate an immune response in the T cell areas.
 -  The body uses humoral and cellular immune responses to reject a transplanted graft.
 -  Humoral immune response is seen though not implicated in protection.
 -  These cells have the ability to suppress the body's natural immune response.
 -  An immune response is a reaction caused by the invasion of the body by an antigen.
 -  In the realm of immunology, substances that cause immune responses or allergic reactions are known as antigens.
 -  This novel vaccine induces strong cellular and antibody immune responses in animal models, including non-human primates.
 -  One theory as to why these cells do not initiate an immune response in the periphery is anergy.
 -  Our bodies make much stronger immune responses to foreign cells of our own species than to cells of other species.
 -  The shots stimulate an immune response that protects against future allergic reactions.
 -  Each specialized type of cell is responsible for a particular immune response.
 -  The technique measures the levels of biological molecules associated with an immune response by the body to bacteria in a wound.
 -  A strong immune response is an indication that the body is fighting the cancer.
 -  And there's been enough time for evolution to have changed the genetic profile of the immune responses in different people.
 -  Monocytes are crucially involved in adaptive immune responses.
 -  As with cryotherapy, the tissue left behind may stimulate an immune response.
 
    Definition of immune response in US English: immune responsenounɪˈˌmjun rəˈspɑns The reaction of the cells and fluids of the body to the presence of a substance which is not recognized as a constituent of the body itself.  Example sentencesExamples -  Our bodies make much stronger immune responses to foreign cells of our own species than to cells of other species.
 -  An immune response is a reaction caused by the invasion of the body by an antigen.
 -  Many different chemicals that are used in the immune response can now be made in the laboratory.
 -  Humoral immune response is seen though not implicated in protection.
 -  The body uses humoral and cellular immune responses to reject a transplanted graft.
 -  The shots stimulate an immune response that protects against future allergic reactions.
 -  Monocytes are crucially involved in adaptive immune responses.
 -  They will be looking for cell properties that may contribute to the faulty immune response found in lupus.
 -  In the realm of immunology, substances that cause immune responses or allergic reactions are known as antigens.
 -  A strong immune response is an indication that the body is fighting the cancer.
 -  These cells have the ability to suppress the body's natural immune response.
 -  This novel vaccine induces strong cellular and antibody immune responses in animal models, including non-human primates.
 -  One theory as to why these cells do not initiate an immune response in the periphery is anergy.
 -  They then migrate to lymph nodes to initiate an immune response in the T cell areas.
 -  Ebola virus kills quickly, giving the body little time to launch an effective immune response.
 -  Each specialized type of cell is responsible for a particular immune response.
 -  We now have the ability to isolate those cells in a person's body that are necessary to generate an immune response.
 -  As with cryotherapy, the tissue left behind may stimulate an immune response.
 -  The technique measures the levels of biological molecules associated with an immune response by the body to bacteria in a wound.
 -  And there's been enough time for evolution to have changed the genetic profile of the immune responses in different people.
 
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