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Epitope Mapping

Molecular Biotechnology, 1994
Monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) are specific immunological tools because they bind to a precise determinant (the epitope) on the surface of a protein. The procedure of identifying the binding site of a MAb is often termed "epitope mapping."
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Mapping Epitopes by Phage Display

2023
Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are valuable biological molecules, serving for many applications. Therefore, it is advantageous to know the interaction pattern between antibodies and their antigens. Regions on the antigen which are recognized by the antibodies are called epitopes, and the respective molecular counterpart of the epitope on the mAbs is ...
Stephan, Steinke   +14 more
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Mapping the Epitopes of Antibodies

Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering Reviews, 2007
(2007). Mapping the Epitopes of Antibodies. Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering Reviews: Vol. 24, No. 1, pp. 1-30.
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Proteolytic Fragmentation for Epitope Mapping

2003
The use of antigen fragments generated by specific proteolytic cleavage is a relatively simple "library" approach for epitope mapping in which possible overlapping fragments are screened with the antibody on Western blots. Proteolytic fragmentation with numerous proteases having different cleavage specificites can be carried out on native and ...
MAZZONI, MARIA ROSA   +2 more
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Mapping conformational epitopes by NMR spectroscopy

Current Opinion in Virology, 2021
Antibodies recognize their target with high affinity and specificity. This is important for pathogen neutralization, which plays a crucial role in defense against disease. Antibodies are powerful tools in the development of new therapeutics, such as vaccines, to fight diseases such as viral infections and even cancer.
Ana P. Valente, Mariana Manzano-Rendeiro
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Epitope Mapping

1998
Epitope mapping can be used to identify areas of a protein that an antibody recognizes and binds to. Monoclonal antibodies are easier to characterize, but epitope maps can also be produced for polyclonal antisera.
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Fine epitope mapping of the CD19 extracellular domain promotes design.

Biochemistry, 2019
The B cell surface protein CD19 is present throughout the cell life cycle and uniformly expressed in leukemias making it a target for chimeric antigen receptor engineered immune cell therapy.
Justin R. Klesmith   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

CD4 T-Cell Epitope Mapping

2003
The majority of T cells recognize peptide epitopes bound to major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-encoded glycoproteins on the surface of professional antigen-presenting cells (APC), principally dendritic cells, macrophages, and B cells (1-3). Most T cells are specific for peptide epitopes in association with either classical MHC class Ia molecules ...
Alexei A. Delvig, John H. Robinson
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Epitope mapping by solution NMR spectroscopy

Journal of Molecular Recognition, 2015
Antibodies play an ever more prominent role in basic research as well as in the biotechnology and pharmaceutical sectors. Characterizing their epitopes, that is, the region that they recognize on their target molecule, is useful for purposes ranging from molecular biology research to vaccine design and intellectual property protection.
Bardelli M.   +6 more
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Mapping T cell epitopes by flow cytometry

Methods, 2003
Epitope mapping by flow cytometry is a very modern approach that not only identifies T-cell epitopes but simultaneously allows for detailed analysis of the responding T-cell subsets including lineage, activation marker expression, and other markers of interest.
Hans-Dieter Volk   +5 more
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