Volume 24, Issue 10 pp. 816-826
Review
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From the Structure of Antibodies to the Diversification of the Immune Responce (Noble Lecture)

Dr. Cesar Milstein

Dr. Cesar Milstein

Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Medical Research Council Center, Hills Road, Cambridge CB2 2QH (England)

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First published: October 1985
Citations: 10

Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1985.—We thank the Nobel Foundation, Stockholm, for permission to publish this article.

Abstract

The unimaginable variety of antibody structures is evidenced by the fact that an animal produces specific antibodies against bacteria, viruses, and other foreign substances, even against substances with which it has had no prior contact. How is this possible? In his lecture, on the occasion of accepting the 1984 Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine, Cesar Milstein describes work directed toward answering this question. These investigations have led to, among other things, the development of the hybridoma technique in collaboration with G. Köhler.

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