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Monoclonal Antibodies
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This is what happens when you search 'antibodies' and end up going down a rabbit hole.
Can anyone help me interpret the function of a monoclonal antibody in plain English. I've tried reading the wiki link but would like it in laymens terms. I found a reference to it somewhere and it looked interesting but need to understand it more.
Cheers
https:/ /en.wik ipedia. org/wik i/Monoc lonal_a ntibody
Can anyone help me interpret the function of a monoclonal antibody in plain English. I've tried reading the wiki link but would like it in laymens terms. I found a reference to it somewhere and it looked interesting but need to understand it more.
Cheers
https:/
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by tiggerblue10. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.the wiki article is probably the simplest
the simplest model is from C19 ( late 1800s) where the cell is a tennic ball and there are little trees or 'Y' stucl on them
the Y instructs somehow the antibody to be produced
which goes up the cell and goes 'gnit gnit gnit' and sticks onto the tree.
and as George Bernard Shaw says in The Doctor's Dilemma - makes them more 'tasty'
I did Path before all this and even then 1970s it was the holy grail - a cell might produce an antibody
and it was even possible to culture cells that produced one antibody - myeloma cells - only the antibodies didnt do diddly squat
and the big thing was to iidentify the cell make a useful antibody and make it gee up and produce truly prodigious amounts
and when it ws solved we all gasped in wonder
the wiki article is quite good
the simplest model is from C19 ( late 1800s) where the cell is a tennic ball and there are little trees or 'Y' stucl on them
the Y instructs somehow the antibody to be produced
which goes up the cell and goes 'gnit gnit gnit' and sticks onto the tree.
and as George Bernard Shaw says in The Doctor's Dilemma - makes them more 'tasty'
I did Path before all this and even then 1970s it was the holy grail - a cell might produce an antibody
and it was even possible to culture cells that produced one antibody - myeloma cells - only the antibodies didnt do diddly squat
and the big thing was to iidentify the cell make a useful antibody and make it gee up and produce truly prodigious amounts
and when it ws solved we all gasped in wonder
the wiki article is quite good
-- answer removed --
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