User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
antibodies- Plural of antibody
Extensive Definition
Antibodies (also known as immunoglobulins) are
gamma
globulin proteins
that are found in blood or
other bodily
fluids of vertebrates, and are used by
the immune
system to identify and neutralize foreign objects, such as
bacteria and viruses. They are typically made
of basic structural units - each with two large heavy chains
and two small light chains
- to form, for example, monomers with one unit, dimers with two units or pentamers with five units.
Antibodies are produced by a kind of white
blood cell called a B cell. There are
several different types of antibody heavy chain, and several
different kinds of antibodies, which are grouped into different
isotypes
based on which heavy chain they possess. Five different antibody
isotypes are known in mammals, which perform different roles, and
help direct the appropriate immune response for each different type
of foreign object they encounter.
Although the general structure of all antibodies
is very similar, a small region at the tip of the protein is
extremely variable, allowing millions of antibodies with slightly
different tip structures to exist. This region is known as the
hypervariable region. Each of these variants can bind to a
different target, known as an antigen. This huge diversity of
antibodies allows the immune system to recognize an equally wide
diversity of antigens. The unique part of the antigen recognized by
an antibody is called an epitope. These epitopes bind
with their antibody in a highly specific interaction, called
induced
fit, that allows antibodies to identify and bind only their
unique antigen in the midst of the millions of different molecules
that make up an organism. Recognition of an
antigen by an antibody tags it for attack by other parts of the
immune system. Antibodies can also neutralize targets directly by,
for example, binding to a part of a pathogen that it needs to cause
an infection.
The large and diverse population of antibodies is
generated by random combinations of a set of gene segments that encode different
antigen binding sites (or paratopes), followed by random mutations in this area of the
antibody gene, which create further diversity. Antibody genes also
re-organize in a process called
class switching that changes the base of the heavy chain to
another, creating a different isotype of the antibody that retains
the antigen specific variable region. This allows a single antibody
to be used by several different parts of the immune system.
Production of antibodies is the main function of the humoral
immune system.