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  2. List of therapeutic monoclonal antibodies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_therapeutic...

    This list of over 500 monoclonal antibodies includes approved and investigational drugs as well as drugs that have been withdrawn from market; consequently, the column Use does not necessarily indicate clinical usage. See the list of FDA-approved therapeutic monoclonal antibodies in the monoclonal antibody therapy page.

  3. Avidity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avidity

    Avidity is commonly applied to antibody interactions in which multiple antigen-binding sites simultaneously interact with the target antigenic epitopes, often in multimerized structures. Individually, each binding interaction may be readily broken; however, when many binding interactions are present at the same time, transient unbinding of a ...

  4. Monoclonal antibody therapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monoclonal_antibody_therapy

    [8] [9] Treatment also had to be tailored to each individual patient, which was impracticable in routine clinical settings. [citation needed] Four major antibody types that have been developed are murine, chimeric, humanised and human. Antibodies of each type are distinguished by suffixes on their name. [citation needed]

  5. Affibody molecule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affibody_molecule

    Affibody molecules are small, robust proteins engineered to bind to a large number of target proteins or peptides with high affinity, imitating monoclonal antibodies, and are therefore a member of the family of antibody mimetics. Affibody molecules are used in biochemical research and are being developed as potential new biopharmaceutical drugs ...

  6. Antigen-antibody interaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigen-antibody_interaction

    The strength of an individual interaction between a single binding site on an antibody and its target epitope is termed the affinity of that interaction. [14] Avidity and affinity can be judged by the dissociation constant for the interactions they describe. The lower the dissociation constant, the higher the avidity or affinity, and the ...

  7. Monospecific antibody - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monospecific_antibody

    Monoclonal antibodies are monospecific, but monospecific antibodies may also be produced by other means than producing them from a common germ cell. Regarding antibodies, monospecific and monovalent overlap in meaning; both can indicate specificity to one antigen, one epitope, or one cell type (including one microorganism species). However ...

  8. New antibody treatment ‘both prevents and treats Covid-19’

    www.aol.com/antibody-treatment-both-prevents...

    An antibody treatment developed by pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca has shown its ability to both prevent and treat Covid-19, according to new data. ... The treatment has been billed as suitable ...

  9. Polyclonal antibodies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyclonal_antibodies

    Polyclonal antibodies (pAbs) are antibodies that are secreted by different B cell lineages within the body (whereas monoclonal antibodies come from a single cell lineage). They are a collection of immunoglobulin molecules that react against a specific antigen , each identifying a different epitope .