IA. General Microbiology | 19. Antigen-antibody reactions used in laboratory. Flashcards
I. Basics
1. What is serology?
Antigen + antibody binding in vitro
= forming detectable complex
I. Basics
2. How do we use serology?
- Can investigate unknown antigens with known antibodies , or presence of antibodies with known antigens, or qualitative and quantitative detection of antibodies and antigens
- Used if detection of the antigen is urgent (life-threatening, epidemiological importance) or if cannot be cultivated on artificial culture media and/or requires long or expensive cultivation
methods
II. Antigen-antibody reactions used in lab
1. What are the 2 main types of Antigen-antibody reactions used in lab?
- Ag-Ab binding with visible result
- Indirect detection of Ab-Ag binding
II. Antigen-antibody reactions used in lab
1. What are the 2 main types of Antigen-antibody reactions used in lab?
- Ag-Ab binding with visible result
- Indirect detection of Ab-Ag binding
II. Antigen-antibody reactions used in lab
2. What are the 2 reactions types of Ag-Ab binding that give visible result?
- Agglutination
- Precipitation
II. Antigen-antibody reactions used in lab
3A. What is Agglutination in Ag-Ab binding?
cellular antigen and specific antibody bonds causing of
the cells
II. Antigen-antibody reactions used in lab
3B. What are the 3 types of agglutination caused by Antigen-antibody binding?
- Qualitative: Slide- agglutination
- Quantitative: tube agglutination (Widal’s type reaction)
- Coagglutination
II. Antigen-antibody reactions used in lab
3C. What are the features of Slide- agglutination?
- Reagent (Ab)+ saline + bacterium(Ag)= clumps (positive) or homogenous (negative)
- e.g. serotyping E.Coli
II. Antigen-antibody reactions used in lab
3D1. What are the features of tube- agglutination?
Quantitative: tube agglutination (Widal’s type reaction) (i.e. Dilution row of erum(Ab) + known Ag → quantity of antibodies present in the patient’s serum against antigen
- Titer: highest dilution (lowest concentration) where agglutination occurs
- Seroconversion: at least 4x increase in the antibody titer between serums obtained with 2-4 weeks different
- Gruber-Widal reaction= Salmonella typhi, Weil-Felix= Rickettsia, Wright= Brucella
II. Antigen-antibody reactions used in lab
3D2. What is Titer in tube- agglutination?
Titer: highest dilution (lowest concentration) where agglutination occurs
II. Antigen-antibody reactions used in lab
3D3. What is Seroconversion in tube- agglutination?
at least 4x increase in the antibody titer between serums obtained with 2-4 weeks different
II. Antigen-antibody reactions used in lab
3E1. What are the features of Coagglutination?
Smaller antigen/ or antibody was absorbed onto a surface of a larger particle (Such as latex bed)
S. Aureus’s Protein A binds to the Fc region of immunoglobulins → specific Fab region remains
free, can bind Ag-s
○ Latex agglutination: Immunoglobulins are bound to latex particles (e.g. Streptococcus serotyping)
II. Antigen-antibody reactions used in lab
3E2. What is Latex agglutination (Coagglutination)?
Immunoglobulins are bound to latex particles (e.g. Streptococcus serotyping)
II. Antigen-antibody reactions used in lab
4A. Describe Precipitation in Antigen-antibody reactions?
dissolved / and specific antibody binds → visible complex formation= precipitate
II. Antigen-antibody reactions used in lab
4B. What are the 3 major types of precipitation caused by Antigen-antibody binding?
- Precipitate in liquid medium
- Precipitate in agar gel– immune diffusion
- Gel precipitation: double immunodiffusion