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Lymphocytes Objectives Describe the structure and mode of action of T lymphocytes and B lymphocytes including the significance of cell signalling and the role of memory cells. Lymphocytes LYMPHOCYTES are WBC that accumulate in the lymph and lymph nodes, but are also found in the spleen and blood. They activate the immune response Lymphocytes are mostly small and inactive cells prior to infection. Lymphocytes Originate from stem cells in the bone marrow Small white cells with little cytoplasm and spherical nuclei Two types: 1. T cells 2. B cells Lymphocytes • B-cells mature in bone marrow then concentrate in lymph nodes and spleen • T-cells mature in the thymus • B and T cells mature then circulate in the blood and lymph • Circulation ensures they come into contact with pathogens and each other • Lymphocytes are activated by the presence of an antigen • Macrophages engulf and break up pathogens • They present the antigen on their surface (APC) for the lymphocytes to identify • Macrophages release chemicals called monokines (a type of cytokine) to attract neutrophils and activate lymphocytes T -Lymphocytes • Mature T-cells have T cell receptors which are complementary to 1 antigen • They are activated when the receptor comes into contact with the Ag on another cell (e.g. an APC or an invaded body cell) T-Lymphocytes Once activated by a specific antigen (clonal selection) they divide by mitosis to provide clones (clonal expansion) There are 4 main types of T cells: Helper/Killer/memory/supressor T-Lymphocytes T-helper cells – secrete CYTOKINES help B cells divide stimulate phagocytes Cytotoxic T cells (killer T cells) Kill body cells displaying antigen Memory T cells remain in body for reexposure to the Ag The T Cell response is called the “cell mediated immune response” B -Lymphocytes • There are small group of clones of B-lymphocytes each of which produce a specific Ab • The specific Ab are embedded in the cell surface membrane and are called Ab receptors. B -Lymphocytes • When the receptors in the membrane recognise an antigen on the surface of the pathogen or APC (clonal selection) that B-cell line divides rapidly – clonal expansion • Activation is aided by T helper cells B -Lymphocytes • Some activated B cells PLASMA CELLS these produce lots of Ab • The Ab travel to the blood, lymph, lining of gut and lungs. • Number of plasma cells decreases after a few weeks • Ab stay in the blood longer but eventually their numbers go down too. B-Lymphocytes • Some activated B cells MEMORY CELLS. • Memory cells divide rapidly as soon as the antigen is reintroduced. • When the pathogen infects again it is destroyed before any symptoms show The production of Ab by B cells is called the “humoral immune” response B Cells Clonal selection Clonal expansion antibodies Summary of the Immune Responses