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Human Defense Levels of Defense – Your body can tell the difference between your cells and those that are not yours. Primary Line of Defense – chemical and mechanical methods to keep microbes out of the body, nonspecific Epidermis – sebum, perspiration, keratinized cells Eyes – mucus covering, lacrimal apparatus, tears Digestive system – saliva, mucus (goblet cells), HCl Circulatory system – transferrins Respiratory system – ciliary escalator Urinary and reproductive systems – urine, vaginal secretions 1 Secondary Line of Defense – methods to control microbes once they are in the body. Non specific Phagocytosis – cell eating o Method of action 1. Chemotaxis 2. Adherence 3. Ingestion 4. Digestion 5. Discharge Inflammation caused by chemical signals given off by injured tissues. Chemicals cause blood vessels to dilate, bringing more white blood cells to the area. o A local response to injury o Method of action 1. Chemotaxis 2. Vasodilation 3. Increased numbers of phagocytes 4. Clotting factors 5. Tissue repair Fever – Leukocytes release chemicals which are carried to the hypothalamus, increases body temperature and lowers the amount of iron available in the blood. o A systemic response to injury. 2 The complement system – numerous proteins in the blood that act in an ordered sequence (or cascade) with each other and bind onto and lyse foreign cells. o Enhance phagocytosis and vasodilatation o Can be activated in two ways – 1. Classical pathway – initiated by antigenantibody binding, to be covered later. 2. Alternative pathway – reaction does not involve antibodies. Results Complement proteins interact with cell wall and form a membrane attack complex (MAC) which forms a hole in the cell surface. Proteins coat bacterial cell making it easier for phagocytosis. Proteins stimulate mast cells and basophils to produce histamine, contributing to vasodilatation. Interferon – an antiviral protein produced by viral infected cells. Specific Defense – the Third Level of Defense Recognition of specific foreign molecules called antigens, which results in the host producing molecules designed specifically to attack that antigen. Antigen – o Examples – o Things that are not antigens - 3 Antibody – o Structure – Light and Heavy chains, variable and constant regions, antigen binding sites Five varieties IgG IgM IgA IgD IgE Function % Example Results of Antigen – Antibody binding Agglutination – clumping o Facilitates phagocytosis, IgM 4 Neutralization – antigens are inactivated o Block antigen ability to attach to cell Opsonization – antigen is coated, facilitate phagocytosis Inflammation – IgG and IgM trigger complement system Activation of complement system Specific Defense B cells and T cells B cells develop from stem cells o Bone marrow, liver, yolk sac Some B cells pass through thymus gland and become T cells B cells = Humoral immunity, Antibody mediated immunity B cell lymphocytes contain antibodies on their cell membrane Develop into o Plasma cells = in the presence of antigen they clone themselves and clones produce large amounts of antibody o Memory cells = retain blueprint of antigen and rapidly divide into plasma cells when antigen reappears Primary response is slow Secondary response is much faster, stronger 5 Monoclonal Antibodies – specific antibody produced in vitro by a B cell clone which has been hybridized with a cancer cell. Used as a diagnostic tool Examples T cells = Cell mediated Immunity T cells are not directly stimulated by the antigen Antigens must be “presented” to T cell by macrophage o Activated T cell functions Activate B cells – divide into plasma and memory cells Activate Cytotoxic T cells – produce enzyme that breaks down plasma membrane of cells infected by viruses Activate more T cells (Helper) 6 Immunity – the ability to initiate defense against an antigen before it causes illness. Active – plasma and memory cells are present – long term Passive – plasma but not memory cells are present – short term Naturally acquired Artificially acquired 7 Naturally Acquired Active Immunity Naturally Acquired Passive Immunity Artificially Acquired Active Immunity Naturally Acquired Active Immunity Vaccine Preparation Virus injected into fertilized chicken egg Virus reproduces Egg injected with weak formaldehyde solution Virus extracted, vaccine solution produced Types of Vaccines Attenuated Whole Agent Vaccine Inactivated Whole Agent Vaccine Toxoids Subunit Vaccine Conjugated Vaccine Nucleic Acid Vaccine 8