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Transcript
UNIT 3 PART 2: IMMUNE SYSTEM
• The blood is a liquid tissue that has three
major functions:
– Transportation of nutrients, hormones,
wastes, etc.
– Regulation of body
temperature, pH, and
water balance
– Protection from disease
and from excess loss of
blood by forming clots
1
PATHOGENS
• Something foreign that enters the body
and causes disease such as:
– Virus (AIDS, chicken pox, common cold)
– Bacteria (strep throat, E. coli)
– Fungi (athlete’s foot, ringworm)
– Parasite (tapeworm, leech, malaria)
– Toxins (lead poisoning, carbon monoxide)
2
The Immune System
• The function of the
immune system is to
protect the body from
disease
• Recognizes, attacks,
destroys, and remembers
each kind of pathogen
• Components: bone
marrow, WBCs, lymph
nodes, tonsils, thymus,
and spleen
3
IMMUNITY
• The ability to fight infection through the
production of antibodies or the production of
phagocytic cells that kill foreign cells.
• It works because the body can distinguish
between itself and foreign substances or
“nonself” by recognizing cell markers.
• Lymphocytes (B cells and T cells) recognize
foreign antigens and either produce
antibodies or kill foreign cells. Each B or T cell
recognizes a different antigen.
4
• Antigen
– A molecule on the
surface of a cell that
identifies that
particular cell. All cells
have many kinds of
antigens.
• Antibody
– Binds to the antigen
and helps destroy it
– Made by T and B cells
– Each one recognizes a
different antigen
Antigen
ACTIVE IMMUNITY
• You make your own
antibodies when exposed
to an antigen, like when
you get sick, or when you
get a vaccination. The
antigens used are dead or
weakened viruses or
bacteria. They trigger the
immune response without
making you sick.
• This type of immunity is
permanent.
6
PASSIVE IMMUNITY
• Antibodies are given
to a person
• From the blood of
another person or
animal
• From your mother
during last month of
pregnancy or in
mother’s milk
• This type of immunity
is temporary.
7
BLOOD GROUPS
All human cells have antigens; that is how self and
nonself are recognized.
There are 4 major blood groups that depend on the
presence or absence of 2 antigens on a person’s
RBCs.
You are born
with
antibodies
against the
antigen that is
NOT present
on your RBCs.
8
Lab: Human Blood Groups
9
What happens if you are given the
wrong blood type?
• If you are given a type that you have
antibodies for, then the blood will clump, clog
vessels, and cause kidney failure.
• Transplanted organs are also rejected
because they have nonself antigens and
your body makes antibodies against them.
• This effect can be lessened if the recipient
and donor are closely related and if the
recipient takes immunosuppressant drugs to
slow or stop the body’s immune response.
10
ALLERGIES
• An allergic response is caused by your
immune system reacting to something it
thinks is harmful but really isn’t, such as
pollen, pet dander, nuts, shellfish, or bee
stings.
• This causes special cells to release a
substance called histamine which causes
sneezing and itchy, watery eyes.
• Severe allergic reactions can cause
swelling that closes off airways and can
cause death if not treated immediately.