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  2. Antinuclear antibody - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antinuclear_antibody

    The centromere pattern shows multiple nuclear dots in interphase and mitotic cells, corresponding to the number of chromosomes in the cell. Nuclear dot patterns show between 13 and 25 nuclear dots in interphase cells and are produced by anti-sp100 antibodies. Pleomorphic pattern is caused by antibodies to the proliferating cell nuclear antigen.

  3. Anti-dsDNA antibodies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-dsDNA_antibodies

    HEp-2 cells provide a greater ability to differentiate patterns of ANA than animal sections, due to the large nuclei and high mitotic rate of the cell line. Upon incubation with serum containing anti-dsDNA antibodies and fluorescent labelled secondary antibodies, homogeneous staining of interphase nuclei and condensed chromosomal staining of ...

  4. Anti-histone antibodies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-histone_antibodies

    Anti-histone antibodies can be clinically detected using an ELISA assay. A blood sample is required for the test. [9] [5]Indirect immunofluorescence can also be used to detect anti-histone antibodies.

  5. Anti-SSA/Ro autoantibodies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-SSA/Ro_autoantibodies

    Immunofluorescence pattern of SS-A and SS-B antibodies. Produced using serum from a patient on HEp-20-10 cells with a FITC conjugate. Anti-SSA autoantibodies (anti–Sjögren's-syndrome-related antigen A autoantibodies, also called anti-Ro, or similar names including anti-SSA/Ro, anti-Ro/SSA, anti–SS-A/Ro, and anti-Ro/SS-A) are a type of anti-nuclear autoantibodies that are associated with ...

  6. Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-neutrophil_cytoplasm...

    Immunofluorescence (IF) on ethanol-fixed neutrophils is used to detect ANCA, although formalin-fixed neutrophils may be used to help differentiate ANCA patterns. ANCA can be divided into four patterns when visualised by IF; cytoplasmic ANCA (c-ANCA), C-ANCA (atypical), perinuclear ANCA (p-ANCA) and atypical ANCA (a-ANCA), also known as x-ANCA. c-ANCA shows cytoplasmic granular fluorescence ...

  7. Hook effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hook_effect

    It is an immunologic phenomenon whereby the effectiveness of antibodies to form immune complexes can be impaired when concentrations of an antibody or an antigen are very high. The formation of immune complexes stops increasing with greater concentrations and then decreases at extremely high concentrations, producing a hook shape on a graph of ...

  8. Polyclonal antibodies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyclonal_antibodies

    the relationship between the donor of the antigen and the recipient antibody producer (generally the more distant the phylogenetic relationship, the greater the potential for high titer antibody response) and; the necessary characteristics [e.g., class, subclass (isotype), complement fixing nature] of the antibodies to be made.

  9. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proliferating_cell_nuclear...

    18538 Ensembl ENSG00000132646 ENSMUSG00000027342 UniProt P12004 P17918 RefSeq (mRNA) NM_182649 NM_002592 NM_011045 RefSeq (protein) NP_002583 NP_872590 NP_035175 Location (UCSC) Chr 20: 5.11 – 5.13 Mb Chr 2: 132.09 – 132.1 Mb PubMed search Wikidata View/Edit Human View/Edit Mouse Cryo-EM structure of the DNA-bound PolD–PCNA processive complex Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) is ...