Lec12 Immunology methods Flashcards
1
Q
Polyclonality of immune response
A
- in immune response get polyclonal expansion of B cells that undergo affinity maturation –> polyclonal antibodies may reaction to different epitopes/antigens/etc
- can isolate antibody produced from single B cell with single specificity and use as clinical tool
2
Q
How to make monoclonal antibodies
A
- immunize with HBsAg
- several weeks later isolate spleen cells
- fuse spleen cels with tumor cell line so grow indefinitely/spontaneously [hybridoma]
- select individual cells that make antibody of interest [for HBsAg]
- clone selected hybridoma
- can be made with any antigen
- can be chemically conjugated to enzymes that permit them to be detected in other assay
3
Q
peyers patch components
A
- mostly B cells
- some T, dendritic, macrophages
4
Q
what is a b cell hybridoma?
A
- fuse B cell with tumor cell so that will endlessly divide and grow spontaneously
5
Q
Steps for using ELISA to quantify HBsAg in serum?
A
Enzyme Linked ImmunoSorbent Assay: testing for quantity of HBsAg in serum
- add monoclonal antibody specific for HBsAg to well
- add serum [that may contain HBsAg which will thus bind to antibody]
- Wash so only stuck stuff stays
- add second enzyme-linked monoclonal antibody to HbsAg [to different epitope]
- Add substrate that changes color proportional to amount of enzyme bound
- Measure optical density to quantify amount of HBsAg present
6
Q
Steps for using ELISA to quantify antibody to HBsAg in serum [anti-HBsAg]
A
- add HBsAg to well
- add serum [that may contain antigen to HBsAg which will thus bind to HBsAg]
- Wash so only stuck stuff stays
- add second enzyme-linked monoclonal antibody to HbsAg [to different epitope]
- Add substrate that changes color proportional to amount of enzyme bound
- Measure optical density to quantify amount of HBsAg present