BIO120H1 Chapter Notes - Chapter 9: Active Transport, Immunoglobulin A, Immunoglobulin D

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BIO120H1 Full Course Notes
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BIO120H1 Full Course Notes
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Antibodies by themselves are not toxic or destructive to pathogen, only when they bind to them. Several consequences: antibodies reduce infection by covering up sites on pathogens surface necessary for growth or replication. Neutralizing antibody is used in vaccines: antibodies also act as molecular adaptors that bind to pathogens with their antigen-binding arms and to receptors on phagocytic cells with their fc regions. Therefore, opsonization (coating with antibody) of pathogen promotes its phagocytosis: antibodies bound to surface of pathogens also cause complement fixation through complement activation. This further promotes phagocytosis of pathogen because complement fragments deposited on pathogens surface bind to complement receptors of phagocytes. Antibodies most effective at combating infection are those that are made early in infection and bind strongly to pathogen. B cells need help from activated t cells to mature into antibody secreting plasma cells: this delays onset of antibody production until week after infection.

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