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Recognition of epitopes in a linear fashion. Note: the same (colored) segment of protein can be a part of more than one epitopes

In immunology, a linear epitope (also sequential epitope) is an epitope—a binding site on an antigen—that is recognized by antibodies by its linear sequence of amino acids (i.e. primary structure). In contrast, most antibodies recognize a conformational epitope that has a specific three-dimensional shape (tertiary structure).

An antigen is any substance that the immune system can recognize as being foreign and which provokes an immune response. Since antigens are usually proteins that are too large to bind as a whole to any receptor, only specific segments that form the antigen bind with a specific antibody. Such segments are called epitopes. Likewise, it is only the paratope of the antibody that comes in contact with the epitope.

Proteins are composed of repeating nitrogen-containing subunits called amino acids. The linear sequence of amino acids that compose a protein is called its primary structure, which typically does not present as simple line of sequential proteins (much like a knot, rather than a straight string). But, when an antigen is broken down in a lysosome, it yields small peptides, which can be recognized through the amino acids that lie continuously in a line, and hence are called linear epitopes.[1]

Significance

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While performing molecular assays involving use of antibodies such as in the Western blot, immunohistochemistry, and ELISA, one should carefully choose antibodies that recognize linear or conformational epitopes.[2][3][4]

For instance, if a protein sample is boiled, treated with beta-mercaptoethanol, and run in SDS-PAGE for the Western blot, the proteins are essentially denatured and therefore cannot assume their natural three-dimensional conformations. Therefore, antibodies that recognize linear epitopes instead of conformational epitopes are chosen for immunodetection. In contrast, in immunohistochemistry where protein structure is preserved, antibodies that recognize conformational epitopes are preferred.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Goldsby, Richard; Kindt, TJ; Osborne, BA; Janis Kuby (2003). "Antigens (Chapter 3)". Immunology (Fifth ed.). New York: W. H. Freeman and Company. pp. 57–75. ISBN 0716749475.
  2. ^ "EMD - Calbiochem: Technical Tips/Immunochemical Applications". Archived from the original on 2008-04-11. Retrieved 2008-05-06.
  3. ^ Ahmad, TA; Eweida, A; Sheweita, SA (2016). "B-cell epitope mapping for the design of vaccines and effective diagnostics". Trials in Vaccinology. 5: 71–83. doi:10.1016/j.trivac.2016.04.003.
  4. ^ Ahmad, TA; Eweida, A; El-Sayed, LH (2016). "T-cell epitope mapping for the design of powerful vaccines". Vaccine Reports. 6: 13–22. doi:10.1016/j.vacrep.2016.07.002.

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and/or structural data. Epitopes are generally divided into two classes: linear and conformational/discontinuous. Linear epitopes are formed by a continuous

Conformational epitope

line. These are known as linear epitopes. Antigen Linear epitope Epitope mapping, finding (on an antigen protein) the epitope(s) for a specific antibody

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adaptive immunity. Antigenic escape Antitoxin Conformational epitope Epitope Linear epitope Magnetic immunoassay Neutralizing antibody Original antigenic

Linear (disambiguation)

fluid layer Linear chromosome, a package of DNA that is linear in shape and contains terminal ends Linear epitope (AKA sequential epitope), a binding

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needed] The TCRs of T lymphocytes recognise only sequential epitopes, also called linear epitopes, of only peptides and only if coupled within an MHC molecule

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cell), this explanation is too simplistic. Such epitopes are known as sequential or linear epitopes, as all the amino acids on them are in the same sequence

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to conformational epitopes of the immunogenic carboxyl-terminal region of the TPO protein, although antibodies to linear epitopes have been seen. Anti-TPO