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A protein, produced by cells of the immune system, that is involved in the destruction of disease-causing pathogens. The human body is capable of generating over a trillion different antibodies. Structurally, each antibody is formed by the interaction of two identical ¡°heavy¡± chains and two identical light chains, all of which combine to form a Y shape (the heavy chains span the entire Y, and the light chains the two arms only). The tips of the Y recognize and bind to areas of protein in disease-causing agents such as bacteria and virus. This binding is the first step in a series of responses that lead to destruction or disposal of the pathogens by the immune system. Antibodies are very specific in that each antibody will recognize and bind to one protein region only. This specificity and binding ability is an important mechanism by which the immune response targets foreign proteins, but is also an important property allowing the use of antibodies for research and therapeutic purposes. Antibodies can be used to detect proteins for diagnostic purposes, to isolate a protein from a mixture, or for therapeutic purposes such as specifically targeting tumors. Identical antibodies called monoclonal antibodies can be generated in large amounts against a therapeutic or diagnostic target.