Improve Research Reproducibility
A Bio-protocol resource
Protocols
Biochemistry
Biophysics
Cancer Biology
Cell Biology
Developmental Biology
Immunology
Microbiology
Molecular Biology
Neuroscience
Plant Science
Stem Cell
Systems Biology
Articles and Issues
Current Issue
All Issues
Articles In Press
For Authors
Submission Procedure
Preparation Guidelines
Submit a Protocol
Editorial Process
Editorial Criteria
AI-Generated Material
Publishing Ethics
Competing Interests
Article Processing Charges
About
About Us
Aims & Scope
Advisors
Editors
Reviewers
Leadership and Management
Open Access Policy
Content Availability and Indexing
Journal Partners
Professional Memberships
Contact Us
Alerts
Advanced Search
Submit a Protocol
EN
EN - English
CN - 中文
CN
Log in / Sign up
Bio Page
Edit Profile
Home
Protocols
Biochemistry
Biophysics
Cancer Biology
Cell Biology
Developmental Biology
Immunology
Microbiology
Molecular Biology
Neuroscience
Plant Science
Stem Cell
Systems Biology
Articles and Issues
Current Issue
All Issues
Articles In Press
For Authors
Submission Procedure
Preparation Guidelines
Submit a Protocol
Editorial Process
Editorial Criteria
AI-Generated Material
Publishing Ethics
Competing Interests
Article Processing Charges
About
About Us
Aims & Scope
Advisors
Editors
Reviewers
Leadership and Management
Open Access Policy
Content Availability and Indexing
Journal Partners
Professional Memberships
Contact Us
Alerts
Submit a Protocol
Overview
Authored
(1)
CW
Clare M Williams
Department of Immunology and Microbial Disease, Albany Medical College, Albany
Research fields
Immunology
Peer-reviewed
Preprint
A Triple-challenge Mouse Model of Allergic Airway Disease, Primary Influenza Infection, and Secondary Bacterial Infection
Authors:
Sean Roberts
,
Clare M Williams
,
Sreeja Roy
and
Yoichi Furuya
,
date:
04/20/2020,
view:
3199,
Q&A:
0
Asthma is a global problem that affects millions of individuals. An increased risk of respiratory viral and bacterial infections is one of the complications of asthma. We recently reported that mice with ovalbumin-induced allergic airway disease (AAD) are protected against influenza-
Streptococcus pneumoniae
co-infection. Here, we describe in detail a protocol on how to induce AAD and influenza-
S. pneumoniae
co-infection in mice and to evaluate the specific roles of asthma on immunity to viral and bacterial pathogens in the hope of translating findings to benefit asthmatic individuals.
More >
Find out more
We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience. By using our website, you are agreeing to allow the storage of cookies on your computer.