antipolysaccharide
Antipolysaccharide is a term used to describe antibodies or other agents that recognize and bind polysaccharide antigens, particularly those present on the surfaces of bacteria such as capsule polysaccharides and lipopolysaccharide O-antigens. These polysaccharide structures are composed of long chains of sugar residues and can present repeating epitopes that are targeted by the immune system.
Antipolysaccharide antibodies are typically part of the humoral response to encapsulated pathogens like Streptococcus pneumoniae, Neisseria
Clinically, antipolysaccharide antibodies are important for serotyping and for assessing immune protection against encapsulated bacteria. Vaccines
Research on antipolysaccharide responses includes characterizing epitope specificity, understanding cross-reactivity among serotypes, and developing synthetic or