histotope

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English

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Etymology

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From histo- +‎ -tope.

Noun

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histotope (plural histotopes)

  1. The portion of an antigen that reacts with or binds to a T-cell.
    • 1984, William E. Paul, Immunogenetics, page 156:
      Thus, a mutation affecting the structure of a class II molecule changes the co-recognition specificity of a histotope on the APC of the mutant.
    • 2012, Benvenuto Pernis, Processing and Presentation of Antigens, page 117:
      However, this experiment by itself did not distinguish whether the change was in the desetope, which is the most straightforward interpretation, or in the histotope.
    • 2012, Carl W. Pierce, Susan E. Cullen, Judith A. Kapp, Ir Genes: Past, Present, and Future, page 303:
      First, during ontogeny, T cells are positively selected by recognition of the histotope and then negatively selected by a tolerance mechanism or vice versa.
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