2024-03-28T14:40:44Zhttp://digital.csic.es/dspace-oai/requestoai:digital.csic.es:10261/36102021-12-28T15:50:59Zcom_10261_25com_10261_1col_10261_278
00925njm 22002777a 4500
dc
Márquez, Gabriel
author
Martínez-Alonso, Carlos
author
2001-04
What does a name mean? Don Quixote’s reply to Sancho Panza was that a name is whatever you understand it to mean. This response certainly applies to the evolution of our thinking about chemokines over the ten years of their history. Initially perceived as simple chemoattractants, chemokines are now implicated at diverse phases of the immune response, and their significance is becoming apparent in many areas of biomedicine, including cancer, HIV-1 infection, asthma, and cardiovascular disease.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation, 107(7), pp. 791-792 (2001)
0021-9738
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/3610
10.1172/JCI12608
11285294
Chemokines: the times they are a-changin’