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  2. Antigen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigen

    Exogenous antigens are antigens that have entered the body from the outside, for example, by inhalation, ingestion or injection. The immune system's response to exogenous antigens is often subclinical. By endocytosis or phagocytosis, exogenous antigens are taken into the antigen-presenting cells (APCs) and processed

  3. Antigen processing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigen_processing

    Both MHC class I and II are required to bind antigens before they are stably expressed on a cell surface. MHC I antigen presentation typically (considering cross-presentation) involves the endogenous pathway of antigen processing, and MHC II antigen presentation involves the exogenous pathway of antigen processing. Cross-presentation involves ...

  4. Antigen presentation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigen_presentation

    Antigen presentation is a vital immune process that is essential for T cell immune response triggering. Because T cells recognize only fragmented antigens displayed on cell surfaces, antigen processing must occur before the antigen fragment can be recognized by a T-cell receptor.

  5. MHC class II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MHC_Class_II

    The antigen binding groove, where the antigen or peptide binds, is made up of two α-helixes walls and β-sheet. [ 3 ] Because the antigen-binding groove of MHC class II molecules is open at both ends while the corresponding groove on class I molecules is closed at each end, the antigens presented by MHC class II molecules are longer, generally ...

  6. Cross-presentation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-presentation

    The MHC I pathway is normally used to present endogenous antigens that have infected a particular cell. However, cross presenting cells are able to utilize the MHC I pathway to present exogenous antigens (ones not from the cell itself) to trigger an adaptive immune response by activating cytotoxic CD8+ T cells recognizing the exogenous antigens ...

  7. Autoimmunity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autoimmunity

    Molecular mimicry – An exogenous antigen may share structural similarities with certain host antigens; thus, any antibody produced against this antigen (which mimics the self-antigens) can also, in theory, bind to the host antigens, and amplify the immune response.

  8. Talk:Antigen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Antigen

    There are of course multiple definitions as other users point out here, but classifying exogenous antigens as foreign (outside the body) suggests endogenous antigens are self-antigens (inside the body), which is incorrect. Exogenous versus endogenous antigens refers to where the antigens are located relative to a cell, not the entire body.

  9. Seroconversion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seroconversion

    The antibody or antigen is only detectable in the blood when there is substantially more of one than the other. Standard techniques require a high enough concentration of antibody or antigen to detect the amount of antibody or antigen; therefore, they cannot detect the small amount that is not bound during seroconversion. [10]