Antibody Structure and Function Flashcards

** look at pictures on slides for important ways foreign bodies are ingested

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1
Q

take home points from lecture

A
  1. IgG is most common immunoglobulin type and has the widest range of functions
  2. IgM is the most primitive immunoglobulin type, is the most potent at complement fixation but is unable to directly mediate many functions such as opsonization or ADCC
  3. IgA exists in two forms, one of which is secreted. the secreted form contains a secretory piece that inhibits degradation
  4. IgE is associated with immune response to parasites and is important in the allergic reaction
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2
Q

B cells

A
  • have Ig’s bound to them
  • bacterium binds to antibody
  • stimulated B cell gives rise to plasma cells that secrete more antiodies
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3
Q

gamma globulin

A

-fraction contains most of the antibody

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4
Q

Fab

A
  • top part of the antibody
  • contains light chain variable region, light chain constant region, heavy chain variable region and light chain variable region 1
  • n terminal domain is variable
  • each domain has a different function
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5
Q

types of light chains

A
  • kappa
  • lambda
  • can bind with any of the heavy chain “definers”
  • kappa and labmda can bind with D, M, G, A and E
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6
Q

why does IgM weigh so much more

A
  • 970 kDa

- made from 5 single IgMs that float around

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7
Q

IgG MW

A
  • light chain is 25,000 x 2
  • heavy chain is 50,000 x 2
  • total is 150,000
  • IgG is 75-90% of Ig in serum, and have the longest half life
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8
Q

IgD

A
  • regulatory for B cells
  • 180 kDa
  • located on surface of human immature B lymphocytes
  • associated with some tumor cells
  • 0.2% of serum Igs
  • co-expressed with IgM on surface of B lymphocytes
  • may function as an antigen receptor
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9
Q

IgG

A
  • MW 150 kDa
  • predominant class in serum
  • toxin neutralizing, agglutinating, opsonizing, bacteriolytic (with aid of complement system
  • subclasses IgG1, IgG2, IgG3, IgG4
  • intrachain disulfide bonds occur between the same residues
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10
Q

IgM

A
  • MW 900 kDa
  • predominant class in primary immune response
  • antigen receptor on B lymphocyte
  • with the aid of complement it can be opsonizing and bacteriolytic
  • without complement can’t aid in opsonization because cells do not have FcM receptors
  • 5-10% of serum Igs
  • 4 heavy chain domains, no hinge region
  • J chain (15 kDa)
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11
Q

Fc region

A
  • constant region in the antibody
  • cells have receptors for Fc regions
  • Fab binds to the antigen and Fc binds to our immune cells
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12
Q

IgA

A
  • 160 kDa
  • predominant class in secretions
  • found as a monomer, dimer (secretion) and trimers
  • 15% of serum Igs
  • secretory piece (T- piece) resists acid hydrolysis
  • J chain
  • agglutinating, opsonizing
  • flu
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13
Q

IgE

A
  • 200 kDa
  • immediate hypersensitivty
  • fixes to mast cells (now have IgE-antigen binds and releases histamine)
  • 0.1% of serum Igs
  • mediate changes in vascular permeability
  • may be involved in host defense agains parasitic infection
  • we have cleared most pathogens we would have IgE for out of our environment
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14
Q

protelytic cleavage of IgG by papain

A
  • digests the hinge region-interchain disulfide bonds
  • yields 3 fragments
  • one can by crystallized (Fc)-homogenous, most IgG specific antigenic determinants
  • other two regions have ability to bind antigen and are not crystallized (more variable)-Fab
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15
Q

pepsin degradation

A
  • heavy chain beginning at coo terminal and ending at the region of interchain SS bonds
  • divalent fraction with ability to bind and cross link antigen (not possible with Fab) but lacking the functions of the Fc portion
  • called F(ab’)2
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16
Q

antigen-antibody binding

A
  • variable region of the Ig contains aa sequences coding for antigen binding site
  • some residues do not vary from one protein to another (framework)-not directly involved in binding but in producing the folding of the v region producing the antigen binding site
  • other portions have hypervariability-provide sequence of very specific antigen binding site
  • heavy and light chain V regions contain three hypervariable regions each
  • lie relatively close to each other even though they are one two separate chains and far away in aa seq
  • continuous surface capable or providing complementarity with specific antigen
17
Q

old way of thought

A
  • one gene -one protein
  • genes on chromosomes are fixed
  • mutations take place at constant rate
  • mutations are to be avoided
18
Q

problem with old way

A
  • millions of antigen binding specificities
  • multiple antibody classes and subclasses
  • hundreds of aa for each antibody
  • thousands of bases of DNA information to code for those amino acids
  • that would need billions of bases of information-there are only 3 billion in human genome

gene rearrangement leads to many different variable regions