• Study Resource
  • Explore Categories
    • Arts & Humanities
    • Business
    • Engineering & Technology
    • Foreign Language
    • History
    • Math
    • Science
    • Social Science

    Top subcategories

    • Advanced Math
    • Algebra
    • Basic Math
    • Calculus
    • Geometry
    • Linear Algebra
    • Pre-Algebra
    • Pre-Calculus
    • Statistics And Probability
    • Trigonometry
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Astronomy
    • Astrophysics
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth Science
    • Environmental Science
    • Health Science
    • Physics
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Anthropology
    • Law
    • Political Science
    • Psychology
    • Sociology
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Accounting
    • Economics
    • Finance
    • Management
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Aerospace Engineering
    • Bioengineering
    • Chemical Engineering
    • Civil Engineering
    • Computer Science
    • Electrical Engineering
    • Industrial Engineering
    • Mechanical Engineering
    • Web Design
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Architecture
    • Communications
    • English
    • Gender Studies
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Philosophy
    • Religious Studies
    • Writing
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Ancient History
    • European History
    • US History
    • World History
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Finnish
    • Greek
    • Hindi
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Persian
    • Swedish
    • Turkish
    • other →
 
Profile Documents Logout
Upload
Contract Monoclonal Antibody Production
Contract Monoclonal Antibody Production

... Because antibody requirements differ according to assay specifications, there can be no single procedure for hybridoma development to satisfy the requirements of all assays. SLI develops a customized strategy to generate the best hybridoma possible for each antibody produced. The SLI staff develops ...
DP reactive antibody in a zero mismatch renal transplant pair
DP reactive antibody in a zero mismatch renal transplant pair

... common and well conserved and yet donor specific B-cell flow crossmatch was positive, suggesting that positivity caused by allelic variation was unlikely. It was hypothesized that positive B-cell donor-specific crossmatch was a result of sensitization of patient against DP antigens. It has been describ ...
Innate Immunity
Innate Immunity

... The PCR product is labeled with a fluorescent tag. The amount of fluorescent light produced after each cycle is printed on a computer readout. • This allows for quantification of the number of PCR products produced after each cycle. • For diagnosis of SARs, patient tissues and body fluids can be use ...
PowerPoint - Scranton Prep Biology
PowerPoint - Scranton Prep Biology

... 24.9 Antibodies mark antigens for elimination  Antibodies promote antigen elimination through several mechanisms: 1. neutralization, binding to surface proteins on a virus or bacterium and blocking its ability to infect a host, 2. agglutination, using both binding sites of an antibody to join inva ...
Follicular lymphoma and the immune system: from
Follicular lymphoma and the immune system: from

... presence of sequence motifs in the IgV regions, which act as acceptor sites for N-addition of glycan chains.11 The motifs, introduced by SHM and found in virtually all cases, are Asn-X-Ser/ Thr (N-X-S/T), where X can be almost any amino acid except proline. As shown in supplemental Figure 1 (availab ...
Thyroid Autoimmune Diseases:
Thyroid Autoimmune Diseases:

... Two factors could be involved in development of human autoimmune disorders: 1-Expression of Class II HLA (human leukocyte antigen) on the surface of target endocrine cells. Infectious agent ...
00 (Jouranl of fish~).hwp
00 (Jouranl of fish~).hwp

... Biosensors consist of biochemical recognition agents like antibodies immobilized on the surfaces of transducers that change the recognition into a measurable electronic signal. Here we report a piezoelectric immunosensor made to detect Vibrio vulnificus. A 9MHz AT-cut piezoelectric wafer attached wi ...
PERSPECTIVES
PERSPECTIVES

... preparations — either allogeneic or xenogeneic. This model had been validated previously by Simonsen29, and the resulting growth of lymphocyte colonies was regarded widely as being consistent with Burnet’s theory of clonal selection. To their surprise, Lafferty and Jones28 found that “as the genetic ...
chapter 19 autoimmunity: breakdown of self-tolerance
chapter 19 autoimmunity: breakdown of self-tolerance

... clinically significant autoimmune disease. There are, however, many clinical and experimental situations in which autoimmune processes play a key role in active tissue destruction and disease. We discuss below a few examples of human autoimmune diseases and identify their key features. For some of t ...
I Am A Pathogen
I Am A Pathogen

... cells identify antigens present on pathogens and turn on or initiate the release of cytotoxic T cells that are specific to this type of antigen. Suppressor T cells suppress the release of cytotoxic T cells once the pathogen has been destroyed. It is also important for the students to understand that ...
Organism Physiology Immunity
Organism Physiology Immunity

... have a more developed immune system than other animals? 1st Learn About: Use text and prezi presentation Immunity to answer the following questions in your BILL. Ch. 43 The Immune System: Campbell’s Biology 9th edition The Immune System Questions to Answer: 1. Why are defense systems needed in multi ...
Yukon Immunization Manual: Section 14
Yukon Immunization Manual: Section 14

... “actively” respond. Active immunity is further divided into categories:  Innate Immunity - protective mechanisms we are born with  Adaptive Immunity – cell mediated immunity and humoral immunity ...
The immune system defends the body.
The immune system defends the body.

... cells throughout the body, much as the circulatory system does. The lymphatic system carries lymph, and the circulatory system carries blood. Both fluids transport similar materials, such as white blood cells. Lymph is the fluid left in the tissues by the circulatory system. It moves through lymph v ...
Z-DNA-specific Antibodies in Human Systemic
Z-DNA-specific Antibodies in Human Systemic

... with dDNA and nDNA. The presence of antibody in SLE is correlated with the clinical manifestations of the disease since antibodies were usually maximal during the stages of active clinical disease activity. The anti-Z-DNA antibody activity closely parallels that of anti-nDNA and anti-dDNA, but is ge ...
Intranasal immunization of mice with Echinococcus
Intranasal immunization of mice with Echinococcus

... a liposome (Morein & Simons 1985), or an immuno stimulating complex (iscom) (Morein et al. 1984). An inadequate immune response is not only irrelevant but may even favor the invading organism (Heinzel, Sadick, Mutha et al. 1991), thus induction of a proper response is a relevant research goal. A sim ...
PHG 413 lecture
PHG 413 lecture

... system simply doesn't respond adequately or at all. This may be due to a lowered immunity in general (diabetes, steroid use, HIV infection) or because the host's immune system does not have a B cell capable of generating antibodies to that antigen. Even if the host develops antibodies, the human imm ...
Physiology Ch. 35 p445-450 [4-25
Physiology Ch. 35 p445-450 [4-25

... -antibody also attaches to D-antigen sites on Rh-positive fetal RBC and interfering with D antigen Transfusion Reactions Resulting from Mismatched Blood Types – if donor and recipient blood is different, transfusion reaction is likely to occur in which RBC of the DONOR are agglutinated and not the r ...
Anti-PYRUVATE KINASE (Rabbit Muscle) (GOAT) Antibody
Anti-PYRUVATE KINASE (Rabbit Muscle) (GOAT) Antibody

... P30613). The isozymes differ in primary structure and regulation. This reaction has a large positive free energy change, one of three in glycolysis. All three such steps regulate the overall activity of the pathway, and are, in general, irreversible under wild-type conditions. Anti-Pyruvate kinase a ...
C-ImmSim: a model of immunological models - Iac-Cnr
C-ImmSim: a model of immunological models - Iac-Cnr

... C-ImmSim allows the user to define the antibody’s paratope (Fc) as a binary string. Therefore one can simulate the Idiotypic Network theory of Jerne [14]. Fc represents the constant region of the immunoglobulin molecule that can be seen by the immune system as an antigen on its own. Since the antibo ...
ACQUIRED (SPECIFIC) IMMUNITY
ACQUIRED (SPECIFIC) IMMUNITY

... Lymphocytes are produced in the central lymphoid or primary lymphoid organs (Thymus and adult bone marrow), some of these cells migrate to the secondary lymphoid organs, such as tonsil, lymph nodes, spleen, and mucosa-associated lymphoid tissues. The lymphocytes represent about 20% of the circulatin ...
No Slide Title
No Slide Title

... BINDING TO INFECTED CELLS • THEY ONLY BIND TO THOSE CELLS THAT DISPLAY A MHC CLASS I MARKER WITH THE SAME ANTIGEN THEY ARE SPECIFIC FOR • THEY BIND TO THE MHC CLASS I MARKER AND RELEASE PERFORIN, GRANZYMES AND ...
ADC Immunogenicity Testing Strategy
ADC Immunogenicity Testing Strategy

... compounds, and antibody-drug conjugates, is understanding how the human immune system will respond. As we advance more of these novel therapeutics we will have the opportunity, through careful characterization of antibodies that are generated, to better understand how to produce less immunogenic com ...
Section VIII - BC Centre for Disease Control
Section VIII - BC Centre for Disease Control

... “actively” respond. Active immunity is further divided into categories: • Innate Immunity - protective mechanisms we are born with • Adaptive Immunity – cell mediated immunity and humoral immunity ...
Immunology
Immunology

... is expressed as membrane-bound antibody on B cells (mIg). IgM is secreted by plasma cells as a pentamer in which five monomer units are held together by disulfide bonds. ...
B cells
B cells

... complement protein—which triggers a cascade of complement protein activation • Ultimately a membrane attack complex forms a pore in the membrane of the foreign cell, leading to its lysis ...
< 1 ... 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 ... 118 >

Antibody



An antibody (Ab), also known as an immunoglobulin (Ig), is a large, Y-shape protein produced by plasma cells that is used by the immune system to identify and neutralize pathogens such as bacteria and viruses. The antibody recognizes a unique molecule of the harmful agent, called an antigen, via the variable region. Each tip of the ""Y"" of an antibody contains a paratope (analogous to a lock) that is specific for one particular epitope (similarly analogous to a key) on an antigen, allowing these two structures to bind together with precision. Using this binding mechanism, an antibody can tag a microbe or an infected cell for attack by other parts of the immune system, or can neutralize its target directly (for example, by blocking a part of a microbe that is essential for its invasion and survival). The ability of an antibody to communicate with the other components of the immune system is mediated via its Fc region (located at the base of the ""Y""), which contains a conserved glycosylation site involved in these interactions. The production of antibodies is the main function of the humoral immune system.Antibodies are secreted by cells of the adaptive immune system (B cells), and more specifically, differentiated B cells called plasma cells. Antibodies can occur in two physical forms, a soluble form that is secreted from the cell, and a membrane-bound form that is attached to the surface of a B cell and is referred to as the B cell receptor (BCR). The BCR is found only on the surface of B cells and facilitates the activation of these cells and their subsequent differentiation into either antibody factories called plasma cells or memory B cells that will survive in the body and remember that same antigen so the B cells can respond faster upon future exposure. In most cases, interaction of the B cell with a T helper cell is necessary to produce full activation of the B cell and, therefore, antibody generation following antigen binding. Soluble antibodies are released into the blood and tissue fluids, as well as many secretions to continue to survey for invading microorganisms.Antibodies are glycoproteins belonging to the immunoglobulin superfamily; the terms antibody and immunoglobulin are often used interchangeably. Though strictly speaking, an antibody is not the same as an immunoglobulin; B cells can produce two types of immunoglobulins - surface immunoglobulins, which are B cell receptors; and secreted immunoglobulins, which are antibodies. So antibodies are one of two classes of immunoglobulins. Antibodies are typically made of basic structural units—each with two large heavy chains and two small light chains. There are several different types of antibody heavy chains based on five different types of crystallisable fragments (Fc) that may be attached to the antigen-binding fragments. The five different types of Fc regions allow antibodies to be grouped into five isotypes. Each Fc region of a particular antibody isotype is able to bind to its specific Fc Receptor (except for IgD, which is essentially the BCR), thus allowing the antigen-antibody complex to mediate different roles depending on which FcR it binds. The ability of an antibody to bind to its corresponding FcR is further modulated by the structure of the glycan(s) present at conserved sites within its Fc region. The ability of antibodies to bind to FcRs helps to direct the appropriate immune response for each different type of foreign object they encounter. For example, IgE is responsible for an allergic response consisting of mast cell degranulation and histamine release. IgE's Fab paratope binds to allergic antigen, for example house dust mite particles, while its Fc region binds to Fc receptor ε. The allergen-IgE-FcRε interaction mediates allergic signal transduction to induce conditions such as asthma. Though the general structure of all antibodies is very similar, a small region at the tip of the protein is extremely variable, allowing millions of antibodies with slightly different tip structures, or antigen-binding sites, to exist. This region is known as the hypervariable region. Each of these variants can bind to a different antigen. This enormous diversity of antibody paratopes on the antigen-binding fragments allows the immune system to recognize an equally wide variety of antigens. The large and diverse population of antibody paratope is generated by random recombination events of a set of gene segments that encode different antigen-binding sites (or paratopes), followed by random mutations in this area of the antibody gene, which create further diversity. This recombinational process that produces clonal antibody paratope diversity is called V(D)J or VJ recombination. Basically, the antibody paratope is polygenic, made up of three genes, V, D, and J. Each paratope locus is also polymorphic, such that during antibody production, one allele of V, one of D, and one of J is chosen. These gene segments are then joined together using random genetic recombination to produce the paratope. The regions where the genes are randomly recombined together is the hyper variable region used to recognise different antigens on a clonal basis. Antibody genes also re-organize in a process called class switching that changes the one type of heavy chain Fc fragment to another, creating a different isotype of the antibody that retains the antigen-specific variable region. This allows a single antibody to be used by different types of Fc receptors, expressed on different parts of the immune system.
  • studyres.com © 2025
  • DMCA
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Report