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  2. Antigenic variation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigenic_variation

    Antigenic variation or antigenic alteration refers to the mechanism by which an infectious agent such as a protozoan, bacterium or virus alters the proteins or carbohydrates on its surface and thus avoids a host immune response, making it one of the mechanisms of antigenic escape. It is related to phase variation. Antigenic variation not only ...

  3. Major histocompatibility complex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_histocompatibility...

    Marsupial MHC genotypic variation lies between eutherian mammals and birds, taken as the minimal MHC encoding, but is closer in organization to that of nonmammals. The IPD-MHC Database [14] was created which provides a centralised repository for sequences of the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) from a number of different species. As of ...

  4. Isotype (immunology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isotype_(immunology)

    IgM is first expressed as a monomer on the surface of immature B cells. Upon antigenic stimulation, IgM+ B cells secrete pentameric IgM antibody formed by five Ig monomers which are linked via disulfide bonds. The pentamer also contains a polypeptide J-chain, which links two of the monomers and facilitates secretion at mucosal surfaces.

  5. Antigen processing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigen_processing

    This can allow the cell to skip the parts of the endogenous pathway that involve synthesis of antigens from the antigenic genes with cellular machinery upon infection, because the endogenous pathway can involve infection before being able to present antigens with MHC I, and cross-presentation saves them the effort needed for that and allows the ...

  6. Viral strategies for immune response evasion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viral_strategies_for...

    The human immune system relies on a plethora of cell-cell signaling pathways to transmit information about a cell's health and microenvironment. Many of these pathways are mediated by soluble ligands, cytokines, that fit like a lock-and-key into adjacent cell surface receptors.

  7. Antigenic shift - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigenic_shift

    Antigenic shift is contrasted with antigenic drift, which is the natural mutation over time of known strains of influenza (or other things, in a more general sense) which may lead to a loss of immunity, or in vaccine mismatch. Antigenic drift occurs in all types of influenza including influenza A, influenza B and influenza C.

  8. Antigenic escape - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigenic_escape

    Some antigens may even target pathways different from those the vaccine had originally intended to target. [4] Recent research on many vaccines, including the malaria vaccine, has focused on how to anticipate this diversity and create vaccinations that can cover a broader spectrum of antigenic variation. [5]

  9. Clonal selection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clonal_selection

    In this way, preferential proliferation is initiated of all those clones whose reactive sites correspond to the antigenic determinants on the antigens present in the body. The descendants are capable of active liberation of soluble antibody and lymphocytes, the same functions as the parental forms.