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Specific Defense: Adaptive Immunity
Specific Defense: Adaptive Immunity

the immune system
the immune system

... The main function of the immune system is self/nonself discrimination • This ability to distinguish between self and non-self is necessary to protect the organism from invading pathogens and to eliminate modified or altered cells (e.g. malignant cells). • Since pathogens may replicate intracellular ...
Poliomyelitis
Poliomyelitis

... – CD155 is present on most human cells, so does not explain why it infects certain tissues – Recent studies-suggest human type I interferon receptors possibly prevent – Interferon- protein released by lymphocyte in response to pathogen to trigger immune defenses ...
Immune Responses in the Elderly
Immune Responses in the Elderly

What is virulence
What is virulence

... -isolating the bacterium in pure culture -showing that the isolated bacterium causes disease in humans or animals -reisolating the bacterium from the intentionally infected animal ...
How do adaptive immune systems control
How do adaptive immune systems control

... Two signal and danger models Such clonal deletion is useful, but it is not sufficient to prevent all self-directed responses. For instance, this process cannot remove CD8 cells that act against selfantigens that are not found in the thymus; neither can it remove CD8 cells that are specific for those ...
Microbiology
Microbiology

...  A patient developed a rash 7 days after taking penicillin.  Was this the patient’s first exposure to penicillin?  What is the delayed reaction? ...
Document
Document

... chains contain the ITAM motifs which, when phosphorylated, attract Syk (analogous to ZAP70). Note: If the antigen is also attached to complement product C3d, this will complex with CD21 on the B cell and enhance activation about 1000 times! FC Role of CD40 on B cells: CD40, located on B cells needs ...
Immunopathology Type III: Immune Complex Disease
Immunopathology Type III: Immune Complex Disease

Tumor Immunology - UCSF Immunology Program
Tumor Immunology - UCSF Immunology Program

... The genes that are necessary for normal, controlled cell growth are called tumor suppressor genes, and inactivation of these genes can lead to tumor formation. The majority of known tumor suppressors were located by the genetic mapping of organisms with an inherited predisposition for cancer. Howeve ...
Lecture Notes: Immune System (Part I)
Lecture Notes: Immune System (Part I)

... Central tolerance occurs in the thymus for T cells and the bone marrow for B cells. This is supplemented by peripheral tolerance occurring in the lymph nodes and elsewhere in the body. Autoimmunity Sometimes the processes that eliminate antibodies against self antigens fail, and a variety of differe ...
Immunity - Lake-Sumter State College | Home
Immunity - Lake-Sumter State College | Home

... RAST testing  Shows the blood level of IgE (antibody) directed ...
T CELL DEFICIENCY - immunology.unideb.hu
T CELL DEFICIENCY - immunology.unideb.hu

... – monthly injections of Gamma glob. (IVIG) – injection of GM-CSF (neutropenia) ...
Innate Immunity - University of California, Los Angeles
Innate Immunity - University of California, Los Angeles

...  TCR receptor triggering induces ...
Biomolecular chemistry 5. What proteins do: catalysts and binders
Biomolecular chemistry 5. What proteins do: catalysts and binders

... • Immunoglobulin G is a member of a class of blood plasma proteins known as globulins. Immunoglobulin is important in the immune response as we will see in the following slides. • In the illustration on the right, an HIV surface protein is the antigen that is inducing the immune response. It is unde ...
Chapter 13
Chapter 13

Conserved CTL epitopes on the adenovirus hexon protein expand
Conserved CTL epitopes on the adenovirus hexon protein expand

A large sucking breath stirs the air upon which the influenza virus
A large sucking breath stirs the air upon which the influenza virus

... lymph nodes. The incoming T cells scan the peptide-MHC complexes on the dentritic cells. Each dendritic cell will have a mixture of different peptide-MHC complexes displayed on their surface, but a T cell will only be specific for one type of peptide-MHC complex, and only one naïve T cell in 10000-1 ...
Cytokines and Chemokines
Cytokines and Chemokines

... Cell growth Cell differentiation Cell death Induce non-responsiveness to other cytokines/cells Induce responsiveness to other cytokines/cells Induce secretion of other cytokines ...
The immune system is our body`s defense system. It has many parts
The immune system is our body`s defense system. It has many parts

... The skin, tiny hairs inside the nose and the mucous membranes (in nose and mouth) all are the first barriers against germs If those things fail and germs get inside, several things happen. The Immune System’s parts are:  adenoids – two glands in the back of your nose  tonsils – 2 ovals that are fo ...
T cells - edl.io
T cells - edl.io

... – Promise as potential drugs to help fight disease • RSV, a common virus that causes serious respiratory tract infections in very young children, is being treated with a monoclonal antibody drug. • Since the first therapeutic monoclonal antibody was approved by the FDA in 1986, over 20 are now avail ...
CRISPRCas9: how research on a bacterial RNAguided mechanism
CRISPRCas9: how research on a bacterial RNAguided mechanism

Cytokines and Chemokines
Cytokines and Chemokines

... Cell growth Cell differentiation Cell death Induce non-responsiveness to other cytokines/cells Induce responsiveness to other cytokines/cells Induce secretion of other cytokines ...
Inflammation and immunity
Inflammation and immunity

... quantitative importance of IL-10’s anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive properties in critically ill patients. It is possible that treatment targeted to increasing tissue levels rather than plasma concentrations will be more useful. ...
Заголовок слайда отсутствует
Заголовок слайда отсутствует

... are not specific for HIV to become activated and undergo apoptosis (cell death). Many uninfected T cells die in HIV infected individuals. Peripheral lymphoid depletion is met by increased production of T cells from stem cells in the bone marrow. This process produces more actively dividing T cells w ...
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Molecular mimicry

Molecular mimicry is defined as the theoretical possibility that sequence similarities between foreign and self-peptides are sufficient to result in the cross-activation of autoreactive T or B cells by pathogen-derived peptides. Despite the promiscuity of several peptide sequences which can be both foreign and self in nature, a single antibody or TCR (T cell receptor) can be activated by even a few crucial residues which stresses the importance of structural homology in the theory of molecular mimicry. Upon the activation of B or T cells, it is believed that these ""peptide mimic"" specific T or B cells can cross-react with self-epitopes, thus leading to tissue pathology (autoimmunity). Molecular mimicry is a phenomenon that has been just recently discovered as one of several ways in which autoimmunity can be evoked. A molecular mimicking event is, however, more than an epiphenomenon despite its low statistical probability of occurring and these events have serious implications in the onset of many human autoimmune disorders. In the past decade the study of autoimmunity, the failure to recognize self antigens as ""self,"" has grown immensely. Autoimmunity is a result of a loss of immunological tolerance, the ability for an individual to discriminate between self and non-self. Growth in the field of autoimmunity has resulted in more and more frequent diagnosis of autoimmune diseases. Consequently, recent data show that autoimmune diseases affect approximately 1 in 31 people within the general population. Growth has also led to a greater characterization of what autoimmunity is and how it can be studied and treated. With an increased amount of research, there has been tremendous growth in the study of the several different ways in which autoimmunity can occur, one of which is molecular mimicry. The mechanism by which pathogens have evolved, or obtained by chance, similar amino acid sequences or the homologous three-dimensional crystal structure of immunodominant epitopes remains a mystery.
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