Lecture 9- Antibodies and Soluble Antigen Receptors Flashcards

1
Q

What is the role of membrane-bound antibodies?

A

Act as receptors on the surface of B cells to trigger differentiation into Plasma cells

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2
Q

What is the function of secreted antibodies?

A

Neutralize microbes and toxins

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3
Q

Three functions of antibodies

A

Block antigen binding, inhibit spread of infection, and inhibit toxins

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4
Q

Which tube is used to collect antibodies?

A

Red top

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5
Q

What is the Fab portion of an antibody?

A

Fragment-antibody binding (antigen binding site)

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6
Q

What is the Fc prortion of an antibody

A

Fragment crystallizable (Complement activation and binds to cell surface receptors)

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7
Q

What region is found on an antibody between the Fc and Fab regions?

A

Hinge region

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8
Q

What are the two types of light chain?

A

Kappa or lambda

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9
Q

Are heavy chains or light chains more important?

A

Heavy chains

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10
Q

5 different types of heavy chains

A

α, γ, δ, ε, and µ

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11
Q

What do the different types of heavy chain determine?

A

isotypes/immunoglobulin class

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12
Q

What immunoglobulin is found in the highest serum concentration?

A

IgG

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13
Q

What are characteristics of IgG

A

Strong secondary immune response
Cross placenta
Activates classical pathway

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14
Q

Which immunoglobulin looks like a classic Ig?

A

IgG, IgD, and IgE

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15
Q

Which immunoglobulin binds to multiple antibodies to form a large ring?

A

IgM

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16
Q

Which immunoglobulin is found in the second highest serum concentration?

A

IgM

17
Q

What are the characteristics of IgM

A

Primary immune response
Agglutination and complement fixation
Too large to enter tissues

18
Q

Which immunoglobulin is made of two subunits attached by a J chain

A

IgA

19
Q

Which immunoglobulin primarily protects mucosal surfaces?

A

IgA

20
Q

Does IgA activate the classical pathway?

A

No

21
Q

Which immunoglobulin is found in the serum in small amounts and is associated with worms and allergies?

A

IgE

22
Q

Which receptors is IgE known for binding to?

A

FceR1 on mast cells and basophils

23
Q

How do allergens stimulate the production of histamines?

A

By crosslinking IgE and mast cells

24
Q

Why are allergic responses stronger on the second exposure?

A

IgE is produced AFTER the first exposure

25
Q

Which immunoglobulin primarily remains attached to B cells, not circulating in the blood?

A

IgD

26
Q

Which cells does IgD bind to?

A

Basophils

27
Q

Affinity vs Avidity

A

Affinity is the strength of binding between an antigen and epitope
Avidity is the overall strength of attachment

28
Q

What differentiates Ig subclasses?

A

Hinge region

29
Q

What is different between allotypes?

A

Heavy chain

30
Q

What is different between idiotypes?

A

Antigen binding sites

31
Q

What are bovine Igs known for?

A

long variable domain, ball and stalk structure

32
Q

What are camelid Igs known for?

A

Sometimes they do not have a light chain, long hinge region

33
Q

How many molecules are required for IgG activation of the classical pathway?

A

Two

34
Q

Which IL is IgD responsible for producing with basophils?

A

IL-1 and IL-4