Adaptive Immunity

Antigen-specific B-cell and T-cell responses and immunological memory.


foundation tier

Adaptive Immunity sits within immunology and addresses antigen-specific b-cell and t-cell responses and immunological memory. The page below sketches the conceptual scope of the area, the methodological tools it relies on, and the recent literature anchoring its current frontier.

The area organises around a small number of recurring axes: scope (what biological scales the work spans), method (the dominant experimental or computational tools), data regime (what kinds of measurements are now routine vs. still frontier), and open questions (what the field cannot yet do reliably). The sources below cover different combinations of these axes.

Foundational references

Murphy, Janeway’s Immunobiology is a standard reference for the foundations covered here, used across the field to anchor terminology, canonical models, and the relationships between sub-areas of adaptive immunity. Treat it as the entry point to which the more specialised work below adds frontier detail.

Supporting context

Supporting context comes from Evidence for somatic rearrangement of immunoglobulin genes coding for variable and constant regions (Hozumi et al., 1976), cited here as a representative entry into adjacent results that reinforce the framing of adaptive immunity without being the central methodological claim.

Open questions

Open questions in adaptive immunity cluster around scaling current methods to larger systems, integrating measurements across modalities, and producing predictive rather than descriptive models. The references above mark the work that the next iteration of this page should engage with in more specific detail.

Prerequisites

Sources

In context

Where this topic sits in the prerequisite graph. Click any node to jump.

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Explore

  1. 01

    B Cells and Antibodies

    B-cell development, class switching, somatic hypermutation, and antibody function.

  2. 02

    T Cells

    Thymic development, TCR signaling, CD4/CD8 lineages, and effector differentiation.

  3. 03

    MHC and Antigen Presentation

    Class I and II MHC, antigen processing, and immunopeptidomics.


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