enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Idiosyncratic drug reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idiosyncratic_drug_reaction

    To create an immune response, a foreign molecule must be present that antibodies can bind to (i.e. the antigen) and cellular damage must exist. Very often, drugs will not be immunogenic because they are too small to induce immune response. However, a drug can cause an immune response if the drug binds a larger molecule.

  3. Immunogenicity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immunogenicity

    However, strictly speaking, immunogenicity refers to the ability of an antigen to induce an adaptive immune response. Thus an antigen might bind specifically to a T or B cell receptor, but not induce an adaptive immune response. If the antigen does induce a response, it is an 'immunogenic antigen', which is referred to as an immunogen.

  4. Biological response modifier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biological_response_modifier

    Biological response modifiers (BRMs) are substances that modify immune responses. They can be endogenous (produced naturally within the body) or exogenous (as pharmaceutical drugs ), and they can either enhance an immune response or suppress it .

  5. Immune system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immune_system

    The adaptive immune system evolved in early vertebrates and allows for a stronger immune response as well as immunological memory, where each pathogen is "remembered" by a signature antigen. [55] The adaptive immune response is antigen-specific and requires the recognition of specific "non-self" antigens during a process called antigen ...

  6. Social immunity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_immunity

    "Social immune responses are costly for producers" – only in one species, Nicrophorus vespilloides, has this assumption been tested [1] - a bacterial challenge to the larval resource led to a social immune response by the mother, and this response did lead to a reduction in lifetime reproductive success (i.e. there was a cost). [67]

  7. Immune response - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immune_response

    An immune response is a physiological reaction which occurs within an organism in the context of inflammation for the purpose of defending against exogenous factors. These include a wide variety of different toxins, viruses, intra- and extracellular bacteria, protozoa, helminths, and fungi which could cause serious problems to the health of the host organism if not cleared from the body.

  8. Antigen-antibody interaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigen-antibody_interaction

    Acquired immunity depends upon the interaction between antigens and a group of proteins called antibodies produced by B cells of the blood. There are many antibodies and each is specific for a particular type of antigen. Thus immune response in acquired immunity is due to the precise binding of antigens to antibody.

  9. Receptor theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Receptor_theory

    The receptor occupancy model, which describes agonist and competitive antagonists, was built on the work of Langley, Hill, and Clark.The occupancy model was the first model put forward by Clark to explain the activity of drugs at receptors and quantified the relationship between drug concentration and observed effect.