ANTIBODIES. Agents of Immunity

Similar documents
Basic Antibody Structure. Multiple myeloma = cancerous plasma cells Monomer = 150,000. Chapter 4. Immunoglobulin Structure and Function

Immunology: Antibody Basics

Immunoglobulins. Biological Properties

Chapter 2. Antibodies

Immunoglobulins: Structure and Function

Serology as a Diagnostic Technique

Antibodies and Antigens in the Blood Bank 9/7/2015 NAHLA BAKHAMIS 1

Protein homology. Antigens & Antibodies I. Administrative issues:

Antibodies and Antigens In the blood bank

Antibody Structure. Antibodies

Antibody Structure supports Function

IMMUNOBIOLOGY : AN INTRODUCTION

Immunoglobulins Harry W Schroeder Jr MD PhD

1 Name. 1. (3 pts) What is apoptosis and how does it differ from necrosis? Which is more likely to trigger inflammation?

CHAPTER 5 COMPLEMENT

Antigen-Antibody Interaction

CHAPTER 7 CELLULAR BASIS OF ANTIBODY DIVERSITY: CLONAL SELECTION

GENETIC BASIS OF ANTIBODY STRUCTURE AND DIVERSITY. Steven J. Norris, Ph.D

Chapter 17: Immunization & Immune Testing. 1. Immunization 2. Diagnostic Immunology

Immunotherapy in myeloma

MEDICAL IMMUNOLOGY 544. Dr. George A. Gutman

Immunology, Microbiology and Biotechnology

2013 W. H. Freeman and Company. 5 Function of Globular Proteins

Step-by-Step Description of ELISA

Veins Valves prevent engorgement and backflow. Baroreceptor reflex. Veins returning blood

Biomarkers, Early Prediction of Vaccine Efficacy and Safety

Biological immune systems

LECTURE: 22 IMMUNOGLOBULIN DIVERSITIES LEARNING OBJECTIVES: The student should be able to:

Strategies for Assessment of Immunotoxicology in Preclinical Drug Development

MOLECULAR RECOGNITION

Implementation of Artificial Immune System Algorithms

Adrenal Gland. MEDULLA Epinephrine CORTEX. Zona reticularis --adrenal androgen. Zona fasciculata --glucocorticoids

Basic Immunology Lecture 1 st and 2 nd

Sergeant System s Immune System Defense Team Webquest

Atlas of Genetics and Cytogenetics in Oncology and Haematology. IMMUNOGLOBULIN GENES: CONCEPT OF DNA REARRANGEMENT * Introduction

CHAPTER 3 ANTIBODY STRUCTURE I

Biomolecular chemistry. 7. Antibodies: structure and function

Assays for Immunogenicity: Are We There Yet?

In vitro cultures of bone marrow stromal cells and progenitor B cells can accurately recapitulate the normal steps of B cell development.

B cell development The stages of B cell development

American Association of Immunology Heidi Anderson: Lesson Plan for Cell Signaling and Immune System

Chapter 18. Viral Genetics. AP Biology

Ig Isotype (Human) Quantitative Antibody Array

The Immune System and Microgravity. Overview in Humans. Innate Immunity

Innate immunity I: physical and humoral protection

Phylogenetic Assessment of Innate Immunity s Complement Component C3 and Factor B (Bf)

Biology Test Review Microorganisms

Higher National Unit specification General information Unit title: Unit code: Superclass: Publication date: Source: Version: Unit purpose Outcomes

IMMUNOGLOBULIN GENES UNDERGO TWO DNA REARRANGEMENTS

1 Adequate. Some key words were used and used correctly. Some errors were made in the use of key words.

Antigen-antibody reactions with labeled reagents

See more signal with less noise

Practical Applications of Immunology (Chapter 18) Lecture Materials for Amy Warenda Czura, Ph.D. Suffolk County Community College Eastern Campus

Viruses and Prokaryotes

Immune Programming. Payman Samadi. Supervisor: Dr. Majid Ahmadi. March Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering University of Windsor

Course Descriptions. BIOL: Biology. MICB: Microbiology. [1]

Name 10 Molecular Biology of the Gene Test Date Study Guide You must know: The structure of DNA. The major steps to replication.

Molecular Forces in Antibody Maturation*

بسم هللا الرحمن الرحيم. Today we're going to talk about the generation of diversity of the receptors of the lymphocytes

MICROBIOLOGY 20 (course #3124)

Chapter 19b Blood, cont d

ARTIFICIAL IMMUNE SYSTEM AGENT MODEL

Cellular-Automata Based Computational Modeling and Simulation Of the Immune System

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS General Certificate of Education Advanced Subsidiary Level and Advanced Level

Hay fever cure.coli KAIT-JAPAN

BACTERIA. NO or membrane bound WHAT ARE THE TWO TYPES OF PROKARYOTES? TYPES EUBACTERIA ARCHAEBACTERIA. bilayer embedded with

LECTURE: 26 SIMPLE SEROLOGICAL LABORATORY TECHNIQUES LEARNING OBJECTIVES:

Generation of Recombinant Antibodies and Means for Increasing Their Affinity

A Level. A Level Biology. DNA Technology Questions. AQA, OCR, Edexcel. Name: Total Marks: Page 1

Mechanisms of extravascular destruction of red cells coated with IgG1 or IgG3 (± C3b).

Viruses and Bacteria Notes

Viruses 11/30/2015. Chapter 19. Key Concepts in Chapter 19

Immunology- Mic : First observed by Gruber and Durham when serum antibody was found to react with bacterial cells.

Make High Quality Affordable

ab Phagocytosis Assay Zymosan Substrate

Human Rheumatoid Factor IgM ELISA Kit

The Road to Functional Bioanalysis: Development and Validation of a Cell-Based Assay for Neutralizing Anti-Drug Antibody Analysis

Lecture 25 (11/15/17)

Biochemical Binding ADCC Assays Utilizing AlphaLISA Toolbox Reagents for the Characterization of higgs and FcγR1A

Viruses. Chapter 19. Biology Eighth Edition Neil Campbell and Jane Reece. PowerPoint Lecture Presentations for

The Nottingham eprints service makes this work by researchers of the University of Nottingham available open access under the following conditions.

IMMUNOPRECIPITATION (IP)

not to be republished NCERT BIOTECHNOLOGY AND ITS APPLICATIONS CHAPTER BIOLOGY, EXEMPLAR PROBLEMS MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS

Modulation of Immune Response in Lambs

Expectations for Analytical Characterisation in the Evaluation of Biosimilarity: A Regulator`s Perspective

Immunological Techniques in Research and Clinical Medicine. Philip L. Cohen, M.D. Chief of Rheumatology, LKSOM 10 March 2016

Immunology: An Overview

SynAbs S.A. Driving mab innovation for the IVD & BioPharma R&D markets

Biomolecular chemistry. 5. Antibodies: structure and function

Chapter 18 Review Page 1

Assays and Strategies for Immunogenicity Assessment. Steven J Swanson, Ph.D. Executive Director, Medical Sciences Clinical Immunology, Amgen

DNA Technology. B. Using Bacteria to Clone Genes: Overview:

Discovery and Humanization of Novel High Affinity Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies to Human IL-17A

Platelet Refractoriness: The Basics. Martin H. Bluth, MD, PhD

A Level. A Level Biology. Cells, Microscopes, Cell Cycle and Immunity Questions. AQA, OCR, Edexcel. Name: Total Marks: Page 1

SPHERO TM Coated Particles

Transcription:

ANTIBODIES Agents of Immunity -

Antibodies are: The Organization What are they? Protective agents of the immune system Neutralize foreign agents called antigens Essential part of the Adaptive Immune System (AIS) AIS learns to respond to invading pathogens

Antibodies are: The Organization What are they? - Y -shaped Immunoglobulins (Ig) Comprised of 2 heavy and 2 light chains 5 different types: IgA, IgD, IgE, IgG, IgM Each have a specific role Contain Variable Regions which recognize and bind antigen via lock and key method

The Making of an Agent How Antibodies are Generated Antibodies occur in 2 forms Soluble: secreted in blood and tissue Membrane-bound: found on surface of B-cell, also known as a B-cell receptor (BCR) - BCR binds circulating antigen, activating the B-cell and forming plasma cells or memory B- cells

The Making of an Agent How Antibodies are Generated Activation of a B cell and Clonal Expansion 1) Antigen binds the BCR on a B-cell, activating it 2) B-cell begins to divide (Clonal Expansion), forming either plasma cells (antigen factories) or memory B-cells.

Anatomy of an Agent Antibody Structure Antibodies are globular proteins called Immunoglobulins (Ig) Y -shaped Made up of 4 polypeptide chains 2 identical heavy 2 identical light connected by disulfide bonds (-S-S-)

Anatomy of an Agent Antibody Structure Antibodies can also be divided into two regions based on their function Fab (fragment, antigen binding) region. Tip of the antibody Binds the antigen Fc (fragment, crystallizable) region Base of the antibody Can bind cell receptors, complement proteins and other molecules

Anatomy of an Agent Antibody Structure Each heavy and light chain has a constant and variable region The variable region binds the antigen in a lock-andkey manner

Mammals express 5 different isotypes of antibodies (IgA, IgD, IgE, IgG and IgM) with different functions and locations Class of antibody is defined by the heavy chain The Assignment Antibody Isotype

The Assignment Antibody Isotype Basic antibody is composed of 1 Ig unit, i.e. is a monomer Some are dimeric (IgA) or pentameric (IgM) Isotype changes during development of B-cell

The Assignment Antibody Isotype Immature B-cells only express surface IgM As it matures, it expressed both IgM and IgD After reaching maturity, the B-cell is ready to interact with antigen and produce antibody As antibodies are formed, some undergo isotype switching and produce IgE, IgA or IgG

The Assignment Antibody Isotype IgM IgG IgA IgD IgE 1 st class of circulating antibody - found in pentameric form - most abundant antibody - located in the mucous membranes - found in dimeric form - found on surface of B-cells - probably involved in memory cell formation - involved in allergies, i.e. trigger release of histamine

The Mission Antibody Function Antibodies are the main component of the Humoral Immune System They bind antigen and flag them for elimination via 1 of 3 ways:

Neutralization: Viruses and intracellular bacteria require a host cell in order to replicate Antibodies prevent their entry into the cell by binding the antigen, making it harder for it to pass through the cell membrane. Antibodies cannot attack pathogens hidden within cells

Opsonization: Upon binding to an antigen, antibodies flag the foreign agent for destruction or elimination by other immune cells, such as natural killer cells or macrophages

Activation of Complement: Similar to opsonisation, antibody will flag the antigen for elimination. However, elimination is initiated by a cascade of proteins which collect on the cell membrane and form a hole, leading to cell lysis

Vocabulary adaptive immunity: the response of antigen-specific lymphocytes to antigen, including the development of immunological memory antibody: an antigen-binding immunoglobulin, produced by B-ells, that functions as the effector of an immune response antigen: a foreign molecule that does not belong to the host organism and that elicits an immune response B-cell: a type of lymphocyte that develops in the bone marrow and later produces antibodies, which mediate humoral immunity complement: an immune response whereby a cascade of proteins attack extracellular forms of pathogens Fab (fragment, antigen binding) region: the regions of the antibody that binds the antigen Fc (Fragment, crystallizable region): the region of the antibody that binds to cell receptors heavy chain: heavy chains come in a variety of heavy chain classes or isotypes, each which confers a distinct function to the antibody humoral immunity: the type of immunity that fights bacteria and viruses in the body fluids with antibodies that circulate in blood plasma and lymph immune system: is the name used to describe the totality of the host defence mechanism immunoglobulin: all antibody molecules belong to this family of plasma proteins isotype: antibody class determined by the heavy chain light chains: smaller of the two components making up an antibody memory B-cell: a clone of long-lived lymphocytes, formed during the primary immune response, that remains in a lymph node until activated by exposure to the same antigen that triggered it s formation. Activated memory cells mount the secondary immune response. naïve B-cell: a B-cell that has never bound antigen before neutralization: when antibodies inhibit the infectivity of a virus or the toxicity of a toxin opsonisation: is the alteration of the surface of a pathogen or other particle so that it can be ingested by phagocytes plasma cell: a derivative of B-cells that secretes antibodies, i.e. antibody factory variable region: regions that contains the antigen binding site