Antibodies as Clinical Tools Flashcards

1
Q

Define titer

A

measure of the concentration of specific antibody in a sample

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2
Q

How is a titer expressed?

A
  • ratio – dilution series – the higher the second number, the more antibodies are present
  • last dilution determines the value
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3
Q

How are antibodies produced commercially?

A

animals are injected with antigen –> animals will produce antibodies in response –> sample the blood over several weeks –> when ready, sacrifice animal and harvest monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies

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4
Q

Define monoclonal antibodies

A

recognize a single epitope

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5
Q

Define polyclonal antibodies

A
  • recognize multiple epitopes

- many antibodies are secreted from various activated B cells during an infection

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6
Q

What are common modifications of antibodies?

A
  • addition of fluorophore with flourescence

- enzymes catalyze colorimetric reactions in assays

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7
Q

What is a primary antibody?

A

antibody that recognizes a specific target antigen

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8
Q

What is a secondary antibody?

A

antibody that recognizes a specific primary antibody

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9
Q

What is agglutination?

A

clumping together of particles, usually by antibodies binding to antigens on adjacent particles

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10
Q

What is hemagglutination?

A

clumping of RBCs when antibodies bind cell surface antigens

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11
Q

What is the Coombs test?

A
  • antiglobulin test used to test the presence of Rh in pregnant women and fetuses
  • develop anti-human Ig antibodies
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12
Q

Why are we only worried about Rh antibodies and not ABO antibodies?

A

ABO antigens can’t pass through the placenta

IgM is much larger than IgG

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13
Q

Direct vs Indirect Coombs test

A

Direct:
-use FETAL RBCs
-detects anti-Rh antibody bound to fetal RBCs
-wash RBCs to get rid of free Abs
-anti-human Ig added and agglutinates antibody-coated cells
Indirect:
-use mother’s serum
-detects anti-Rh in mother’s serum
-incubate with Rh+ RBCs
-unbound antibodies washed away
-add anti-human Ig and agglutinates antibody-coated cells

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14
Q

Describe the ELISA test

A
coat wells with antigen
add patient serum
add secondary antibody with fluorescence
add substrate
measure absorbance with an spectrometer
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15
Q

Define immunohistochemistry

A
  • tissue sample removed from patient

- a modified antibody is added to identify if and how much of the target protein there is

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16
Q

Define immunocytochemistry

A
  • cells are collected from patient

- modified anitbody added to detect if and how much of the target protein is present

17
Q

What is a flow cytometer?

A
  • detects and counts individual cells as they pass through a laser beam (1 at a time)
  • detected and stained with antibodies for the target antigen (primary or secondary antibody have fluorescent molecule)
18
Q

What is a Flourescence-Activated Cell Sorter (FACS)?

A

-flow cytometer that can sort the identified cells into pure populations of cells with specific characteristics

19
Q

Define dip-stick tests

A
  • dip-stick has the antibodies for a target antigen
  • reaction site: free antibody + dye enzyme
  • test site: fixed antibody + dye substrate
  • control site: fixed antibody that recognizes a different epitope + dye substrate