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. 2010 Dec 16;6(12):e1001249. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1001249

Figure 2. Universal TLR response is more conserved than the immune responses to specific bacterial or viral infections.

Figure 2

(A) The proportion of genes that responded to the treatment in all three species, in any two species, or in only one species are plotted for the subsets of genes classified as part of the universal TLR response, the immune responses specific to bacterial infections, or the immune responses specific to viral infections (B) The proportion of genes classified as part of the universal TLR response, the immune responses specific to bacterial infections, or the immune responses specific to viral infections among genes that responded to the treatment in all three species or exclusively in one species. Genes were classified as part of the universal, bacterial, or viral TLR response, based on the findings of Amid and colleagues [21].