As nouns the difference between antiserum and immunoglobulin
is that antiserum is (medicine) a serum prepared from human or animal sources containing antigens specific for combatting an infectious disease while immunoglobulin is (protein|immunology) any of the glycoproteins in blood serum that respond to invasion by foreign antigens and that protect the host by removing pathogens; an antibody.
antiserum
English
Noun
(en-noun)
(medicine) A serum prepared from human or animal sources containing antigens specific for combatting an infectious disease.
Anagrams
*
immunoglobulin
Alternative forms
* Ig (abbreviation)
Noun
(
en noun)
(protein, immunology) Any of the glycoproteins in blood serum that respond to invasion by foreign antigens and that protect the host by removing pathogens; an antibody.
Synonyms
* antibody
Hypernyms
* glycoprotein
Derived terms
* immunoglobulin A, IgA
* immunoglobulin D, IgD
* immunoglobulin E, IgE
* immunoglobulin G, IgG
* immunoglobulin M, IgM