Action of Antibodies: Neutralization, Opsonization, Complement Activation and ADCC (FL-Immuno/37)
Understanding Antibody Mechanisms in Immune Response
Overview of Antibodies and Their Function
- B cells differentiate into plasma cells upon recognizing antigens, which then produce antibodies that bind to specific antigens.
- The basic structure of antibodies is a Y-shaped molecule with two antigen-binding sites; the stalk is known as the FC region.
Mechanisms of Antibody Action
Neutralization
- Antibodies neutralize pathogens by binding to them, preventing their entry into host cells—a process termed neutralization.
- Microbes or toxins cause disease by attaching to host cell surface molecules; antibodies block this binding, thus neutralizing infectivity.
- Neutralized microbes are eliminated through phagocytosis, making this mechanism effective against viruses, bacterial toxins, and venoms.
Opsonization
- Opsonization enhances phagocytosis by coating pathogens with antibodies that bind to specific antigenic determinants.
- Phagocytic cells recognize these bound antibodies via FC receptors on their surface, facilitating pathogen elimination through phagocytosis.
Complement Activation
- The complement system consists of about 20 proteins in blood plasma; antibody-coated pathogens initiate the classical pathway of complement activation.
- This pathway leads to pathogen destruction through mechanisms like membrane attack complex formation and inflammation.
Antibody Dependent Cell-Mediated Cytotoxicity (ADCC)
Understanding ADCC Mechanism
- In cases where pathogens are too large or intracellular (e.g., viruses), traditional opsonization may not suffice for elimination.
- Antibodies coat infected or target cells displaying foreign antigens on their membranes; leukocytes with cytotoxic functions recognize these antibodies via FC receptors.
Execution of ADCC
- Binding of leukocytes to antibody-coated target cells results in degranulation and release of cytotoxic chemicals that disrupt target cell membranes.
- This process effectively kills the pathogen or infected cell, illustrating how ADCC serves as a critical immune response mechanism.