Receptor Ehrlich

The Ehrlich receptor is a type of membrane glycoprotein receptor in the body of animals from the immunoglobulin superfamily. By analogy, biologically active proteins that contain a glycocapsule identical to the given one and have intramembrane regions with the same order of amino acids are named as a whole. Identified by its role as an antibody in the normal rabbit. The exact amino acid composition is unknown due to the significant number of heterogeneous groups of repeat segments. This structure has a length (from 1 to 20 thousand amino acid residues), however, after cleavage of the Fab fragment and part of the outer membrane esterified with cholesterol, they form an integrated domain (up to 5 thousand amino acid residues) in the matrix of the cytoplasmic membrane of lymphocytes or plasmacytes.

When thermofixed, the receptor forms an eight-layer “cap” supravalvular fold. Within the membrane-bound receptors are several polypeptide chains of the glucose transporter protein GLUT-2. “Polyp” includes an epitope binding protein, that is, a glycoprotein fragment located near the Ig apoenzyme, suitable for the manifestation of the virus in antibody-dependent cellular cytolysis - Dengue fever. Plot ge