Antibody Diversity [rozmanitost protilátek]

topical
7
Terms

diverzita protilátek
protilátky - rozmanitost
teorie kmenových buněk

 

Germ Line Theory

Persistent link   https://www.medvik.cz/link/D000916
Definition

The phenomenon of immense variability characteristic of ANTIBODIES. It enables the IMMUNE SYSTEM to react specifically against the essentially unlimited kinds of ANTIGENS it encounters. Antibody diversity is accounted for by three main theories: (1) the Germ Line Theory, which holds that each antibody-producing cell has genes coding for all possible antibody specificities, but expresses only the one stimulated by antigen; (2) the Somatic Mutation Theory, which holds that antibody-producing cells contain only a few genes, which produce antibody diversity by mutation; and (3) the Gene Rearrangement Theory, which holds that antibody diversity is generated by the rearrangement of IMMUNOGLOBULIN VARIABLE REGION gene segments during the differentiation of the ANTIBODY-PRODUCING CELLS.

DUI
D000916 MeSH Browser
CUI
M0001364
Previous indexing
Antibodies (1966-1969); Antibody Specificity (1970-1979)
History note
80
Public note
80