Antigen-antibody reaction
antigen-antibody reaction
antigen-antibody reaction n.
the binding of an antibody with an antigen of the type that stimulated the formation of the antibody, resulting in agglutination, precipitation, complement fixation, greater susceptibility to ingestion and destruction by phagocytes, or neutralization of an exotoxin.
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antigen-presenting cell antigen-presenting cell n. a cell, originating in the bone marrow and subsequently found as a dendritic cell in various locations, that facilitates the immune response by holding antigens on its surface and presenting them to lymphocytes.
- Antigenemia
antigenemia antigenemia an·ti·gen·e·mi·a (ān’tə-jə-nē’mē-ə) n. the presence of an antigen in circulating blood.
- Antigenic
immunology. any substance that can stimulate the production of and combine specifically with them. pharmacology. any commercial substance that, when injected or absorbed into animal tissues, stimulates the production of . antigens of a particular type collectively. noun a substance that stimulates the production of antibodies n. “substance that causes production of an antibody,” 1908, […]
- Antigenic determinant
immunology, (def 3). noun the specific part of an antigen molecule to which an antibody becomes attached antigenic determinant n. epitope.
- Antigenic shift
antigenic shift antigenic shift n. a sudden, major change in the antigenic structure of a virus, usually the result of genetic mutation.