Cell Function
antigen presentation
an·ti·gen pre·sen·ta·tion [ an-ti-juhn, -jen prez-uhn-tey-shuhn, pree-zen- ]
Subclass of:
Cellular Immunity
Definitions related to antigen presentation:
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Process by which an antigen is presented to lymphocytes in a form they can recognize; antigen presenting cells may ingest or digest the antigen and present the fragments to the cell surface for recognition by the lymphocytes.CRISP ThesaurusNational Institutes of Health, 2006
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The event of providing fragments of foreign proteins, including viruses and bacteria, to the helper T cells. The presentation occurs through the display of the fragments of foreign proteins on the surface of the antigen-presenting cells (APC).NCI ThesaurusU.S. National Cancer Institute, 2021
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The process by which antigen is presented to lymphocytes in a form they can recognize. This is performed by antigen presenting cells (APCs). Some antigens require processing before they can be recognized. Antigen processing consists of ingestion and partial digestion of the antigen by the APC, followed by presentation of fragments on the cell surface. (From Rosen et al., Dictionary of Immunology, 1989)NLM Medical Subject HeadingsU.S. National Library of Medicine, 2021
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(antigen processing and presentation) The process in which an antigen-presenting cell expresses antigen (peptide or lipid) on its cell surface in association with an MHC protein complex.Gene Ontology DictionaryGene Ontology Consortium, 2021
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