Ag-Ab Reaction Flashcards
What is affinity?
Affinity refers to the strength of a single Ab-Ag interaction. Each IgG Ag binding site typically has high affinity for its target.
What is avidity?
Strength of all interactions combined. IgM typically has low affinity Ag binding sites, but there are 10 of them so avidity is high.
What is cross reactivity?
Cross reactivity describes when an Ab binds not to the Ag that elicited its synthesis and secretion but to a different Ag
For example, Ab elicited with toxoids react with native toxins, allowing clinical application for vaccination with nonpathogenic Ag such as tetanus toxoid and diphtheria toxoid.
Describe 3 Ab mediated mechanisms that limit the infectivity of extracellular pathogens.
- Neutralization - Ab prevent virus or toxic protein from binding their target
- Opsonization - A pathogen tagged by Ab is consumed by macrophage/neutrophil
- Complement activation - Ab attached to the surface of a pathogen cell activate the complement system.
How does antibody neutralization work?
- Ab coat extracellular pathogens and neutralize them by blocking key sites on the pathogen that enhance their infectivity
- Neutralized Ab-coated pathogens can then be filtered by the spleen and eliminated in urine or feces
What does Ab neutralization prevent?
It can prevent pathogens from entering and infecting host cells
How does opsonization work?
Ab mark pathogens for destruction by phagocytic cells such as macrophages or neutrophils, because phagocytic cells are highly attracted to macromolecules complexed with Ab
How does complement fixation work?
- IgM and IgG in serum bind to Ag and provide docking sites onto which sequential complement proteins can bind
- Combination of Ab and complement enhances opsonization even further and promotes rapid clearing of pathogens
What is an antigen? What are the major classes of antigens?
Any substance that can be recognized by the immune system
- Carbohydrates
- Polysaccharides
- Proteins
- Glycoproteins
- Nucleic acids
- Lipids
What are immunogens?
Any substance that can evoke an immune response.
Are all Ag immunogens?
Not all antigens are immunogenic.
- Haptens are LMW compounds that are nonimmunogenic by themselves by are antigenic
- Haptens become immunogenic after conjugation to HMW immunogenic carriers
The rule to remember is that all immunogens are Ag, but not all Ag are immunogens. This concept is important when considering rational design of vaccines.
What are the two types of epitopes?
- Sequential epitopes - short stretches of amino acids (4-7 inches length) that can be recognized by Ab when the short peptide exists free in solution or when it is chemically coupled to another protein molecule
- Conformational epitopes require the native 3D configuration of the molecules to be intact, and antigenic determinants need not be contiguous; denaturation of the molecules destroys these kinds of epitopes
What are the requirements for immunogenicity?
- Physiochemical complexity
- Molecular weight > 6 kDa
- Foreignness (non-self)
- Degradability
List the number of available binding sites of each Ab.
IgG, IgD and IgE have two F(ab) binding sites
IgA has four binding sites
IgM has ten binding sites
Why do multivalent interactions increase functional affinity of Ab-Ag binding?
Interactions of repeating Ag with more than one functional Ag-binding region allow greater stabilization of binding and increase functional affinity.