Precipitin
A precipitin is an antibody which can precipitate out of a solution upon antigen binding.[1]
Precipitin reaction
The precipitin reaction provided the first quantitative assay for antibody. The precipitin reaction is based upon the interaction of antigen with antibody leading to the production of antigen-antibody complexes.
To produce a precipitin reaction, varying amounts of soluble antigen are added to a fixed amount of serum containing antibody. As the amount of antigen added:
- In the zone of antibody excess, each molecule of antigen is bound extensively by antibody and crosslinked to other molecules of antigen. The average size of antibody-antigen complex is small; cross-linking between antigen molecules by antibody is rare.
- In the zone of equivalence, the formation of precipitin complexes is optimal. Extensive lattices of antigen and antibody are formed by cross-linking.
- At high concentrations of antigen, the average size of antibody-antigen complexes is once again small because few antibody molecules are available to cross-link antigen molecules together.
The small, soluble immune complexes formed in vivo in the zone of antigen excess can cause a variety of pathological syndromes.
Antibody can only precipitate antigenic substrates that are multivalent—that is, only antigens that have multiple antibody-binding sites epitopes. This allows for the formation of large antigen:antibody complexes.
References
- Heidelberger, Michael; Kendall, Forrest E. (30 November 1929). "A Quantitative Study of the Precipitin Reaction Between Type III Pneumococcus Polysaccharide and Purified Homologous Antibody". Journal of Experimental Medicine. 50 (6): 809–823. doi:10.1084/jem.50.6.809. ISSN 1540-9538. PMC 2131658. PMID 19869667.
External links
- Precipitins at the U.S. National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
- Precipitin+tests at the U.S. National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)