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> How exactly does the body figure out how to configure the variable part of the antibody so that it binds? Does it just try countless variations until it finds a match?

Not a biologist but IIRC, the body produces cells with a shuffled sequence of DNA. Then this specific cell produces one specific variant of antibodies, located on its surface. At this point the antibody is just a random sequence that matches with nothing.

If one day a virus (or anything else) happen to match with the antibody located on the surface of the cell, the cell will then multiply and most of the new cells will specialize into antibody-producing cells (released in the body, not remaining on the surface of the cell) and a small amount will not. The one who aren't producing antibodies are kept in the body for a long time, and they are here to provide quick specific response next time you meet the pathogen again (that's where immunity comes from).

So yeah, it's basically brute-force until a matching antibody is found.



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