*An excess of antibody can inhibit agglutination reactions, again in much the same way as a precipitation reaction- this is known as the '''prozone effect'''. At high antibody concentrations, the number of epitopes is outnumbered by antibody binding sites. This means the antibodies bind to the antigen univalently, so are unable to cross-link antigen. This often happens in the first few tubes of the test, so the agglutination often only happens in those containing more dilute antiserum. | *An excess of antibody can inhibit agglutination reactions, again in much the same way as a precipitation reaction- this is known as the '''prozone effect'''. At high antibody concentrations, the number of epitopes is outnumbered by antibody binding sites. This means the antibodies bind to the antigen univalently, so are unable to cross-link antigen. This often happens in the first few tubes of the test, so the agglutination often only happens in those containing more dilute antiserum. |