BMB 300 Lecture Notes - Lecture 28: Glycoprotein, Antibody, Antigen Presentation

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Need phagocytosis and antigen presentation in order for specific immunity to occur. Cells of specific immune system has 3 traits non-specific immunity does not. Specificity: these cells (t and b cells) can only recognize a specific kind of pathogen/microbe. Example: if the cell recognizes e. coli, it cannot recognize any other bacterium. So specific that it may recognize e. coli a, but not e. coli b. Memory cells: long lived (b-cells) versions that have a specific receptor that initial elicited the response. Immunogens: any substance that triggers an immune response. Antigen: any molecule that interacts and is recognized by immune cells and immune cell products. All immunogens are a(cid:374)tige(cid:374)s, (cid:271)ut (cid:374)ot all a(cid:374)tige(cid:374)s are i(cid:373)(cid:373)u(cid:374)oge(cid:374)s. this e(cid:374)sues (cid:449)e do(cid:374)"t ha(cid:448)e a rea(cid:272)tio(cid:374) to everything outside of out bodies. Epitope: specific region or sit where an immune cell or antibody binds. Can have as many epitopes that will fit. This is helpful because the antibodies can only recognize one specific epitope.

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