Antibodies Normal

Immune antibodies are of two types - protective and regulatory. Protective antibodies are represented by immunoglobulins G on the surface of cells, to which foreign particles (antigens) attach. If one cell gets a lot of antigens, it will become a “checkers horse”. One checker can be large and covered with many threads, and for the second cell hundreds of threads are enough. Regulatory antibodies act through the complement system and interleukins. Disabling regulatory antibodies increases the risk of infectious diseases because the number of protective antibodies is reduced.