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Immune System Outline 3 - Madison County Schools
Immune System Outline 3 - Madison County Schools

... 2. Hodgkin’s Lymphoma - This is a cancer of the lymphocyte white blood cells.(Lymph nodes destroyed.) 3. Stress – This weakens the immune system. 4. HIV/AIDS - This is caused by a retrovirus. a. Host cell is the T-helper lymphocyte. (It keys in on the CD 4 membrane marker protein.) II. Plant defense ...
Worksheet #30 - Ch. 51.3
Worksheet #30 - Ch. 51.3

... Plasma Cells Memory Cells Secondary Immune Response ...
THE IMMUNE SYSTEM
THE IMMUNE SYSTEM

... Reaction of immune system = Response Self & Non-self Molecules which belong to the body = Self Antigens which are foreign = Non-self ...
Immune system08
Immune system08

... Immune system Chp. 16 (pp. 323-350) ~20,000 genes affect immunity, usually polygenic or multifactorial traits ...
EK: A variety of intercellular and intracellular signal
EK: A variety of intercellular and intracellular signal

... Signal Transmission within and between cells mediates gene expression  Cytokines and the immune system  Helper T cells release cytokines that stimulate the B and T cells to undergo proliferation to increase numbers during an immune response.  Growth factors released by cells stimulate cell divis ...
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Immunomics

Immunomics is the study of immune system regulation and response to pathogens using genome-wide approaches. With the rise of genomic and proteomic technologies, scientists have been able to visualize biological networks and infer interrelationships between genes and/or proteins; recently, these technologies have been used to help better understand how the immune system functions and how it is regulated. Two thirds of the genome is active in one or more immune cell types and less than 1% of genes are uniquely expressed in a given type of cell. Therefore, it is critical that the expression patterns of these immune cell types be deciphered in the context of a network, and not as an individual, so that their roles be correctly characterized and related to one another. Defects of the immune system such as autoimmune diseases, immunodeficiency, and malignancies can benefit from genomic insights on pathological processes. For example, analyzing the systematic variation of gene expression can relate these patterns with specific diseases and gene networks important for immune functions.Traditionally, scientists studying the immune system have had to search for antigens on an individual basis and identify the protein sequence of these antigens (“epitopes”) that would stimulate an immune response. This procedure required that antigens be isolated from whole cells, digested into smaller fragments, and tested against T- and B-cells to observe T- and B- cell responses. These classical approaches could only visualize this system as a static condition and required a large amount of time and labor.Immunomics has made this approach easier by its ability to look at the immune system as a whole and characterize it as a dynamic model. It has revealed that some of the immune system’s most distinguishing features are the continuous motility, turnover, and plasticity of its constituent cells. In addition, current genomic technologies, like microarrays, can capture immune system gene expression over time and can trace interactions of microorganisms with cells of the innate immune system. New, proteomic approaches, including T-cell and B-cells-epitope mapping, can also accelerate the pace at which scientists discover antibody-antigen relationships.
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