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The Immune System 1. The Innate System 2. The Adaptive System The Innate Immune System “Nonspecific” system – Surface Barriers – Cell and Chemical Responses Innate Immunity: Surface Barriers Innate Immunity: Cell and Chemical Defenses • They do not target specific pathogens – They target abnormal or foreign cells • Six categories: – – – – – – Phagocytes Natural killer (NK) cells Inflammation response The complement system Interferons Fever Phagocytes • Macrophages, neutrophils, eosinophils 1. Adherence and endocytosis 2. Phagocytic endosome 3. Lysosome fuses with endosome, releases hydrolytic acids/enzymes 4. Microbe is killed and digested 5. Exocytosis Natural Killer Cells • Lymphocytes that destroy tumor cells and cells infected with viruses • Not phagocytes, instead release chemicals onto cell membranes – Cytolytic, perforin complexes • The target cell lyses & nucleus disintegrates • NK cells also release substances to stimulate inflammation Inflammation Response •Redness •Increased Temperature •Swelling •Pain The Complement System • > 20 plasma proteins • Activation triggers cascade of chemical reactions • Molecular Complexes form: – Membrane Attack Complex creates holes in bacterial cell membranes – C3b marks them for phagocytes – C3a and C5a stimulate mast cells to release histamines Interferons - Interfere with viral replication - Block protein synthesis at ribosomes - Activate macrophages - Mobilize NK cells Fever • When macrophages attack foreign matter, they release chemicals called pyrogens into the blood – Endogenous: interleukins, tumor necrosis factors, macrophage inflammatory protein, interferons – Exogenous: Lipopolysaccharides of gram-negative bacteria trigger endogenous factors • The hypothalamus is stimulated to increase body temperature – fever • Liver and spleen sequester iron and zinc • High temp. unfavorable for microbes The Adaptive Immune System “Specific” defense mechanisms • Three characteristics: – recognizes & targets specific foreign substances – protects the entire body, not a specific injury or infection site – has a "memory" to store information from past exposures Cell Recognition Proteins, polysaccharides, glycoproteins signal the identity of the cell (host or foreign) • Major histocompatibility complexes (MHC) – Molecular markers on host cells • Antigens – Substances that mobilize the immune response • Molecular markers on foreign cells, abnormal/infected or cancerous host cells Auto-immune diseases arise when our immune system cannot differentiate “host” from “foreign” cells Key to Adaptive Immune System • Lymphocytes • Originate from stem cells in bone marrow • 30% of circulating WBCs – B cells • mature in Bone marrow – T cells • mature in Thymus Gland – Both types are made in the bone marrow – Immune response may be antibody-mediated (humoral) or cell-mediated Antibody-mediated Immunity • Antibodies: Y-shaped proteins (4 polypeptides) – Made by mature Blymphocytes • Binds to antigens to form antigen-antibody complex Antibody-mediated Immunity • Immunoglobulin classes – IgD: antigen receptor of B cell – IgM: antigen receptor of B cell (monomer); released by plasma cells during primary response (pentamer) – IgG: most abundant and diverse; targets bacteria, viruses, toxins; main antibody for both primary and secondary response – IgA: found in exocrine secretions; prevents pathogens from attaching to epithelial surface – IgE: bound to mast cells and basophils; mediates inflammation and allergic reaction Antibody-mediated Immunity Antigen Pathogen Antibody-mediated Immunity MHC Macrophage MHC+Antigen • WBC detects a pathogen or abnormal cell Signaling molecules – Attacks pathogen – Alerts Helper T cells and B cells • T cells attracted by chemical signals • B cells alerted by using the pathogen’s own antigens B cell Helper T cell Antibody-mediated Immunity • Antigens bind to specific antibodies on B cell surface • Activation causes B cells to divide rapidly – Plasma cells • produce antibodies • 100 million antibodies/hour – Memory B cells • Remain on “stand by” until activated by helper T cells • Surveillance Cell-mediated Immunity • MHC + antigen complex waves a warning flag • Class II MHC’s found on B cells, some T cells, and antigenpresenting cells • Class I MHC’s found on most cells, except RBCs Antigen Pathogen Cell-mediated Immunity MHC Macrophage MHC + Antigen Signaling molecules • Helper T cells (CD4): – recognize class II MHC – stimulate other immune cells Helper T cell • Cytotoxic T cells (CD8): – recognize class I MHC – kill infected, cancer, or foreign cells • Memory T cells: – reactivate on re-exposure • Suppressor T cells: – suppresses other immune cells Signaling molecules Cytotoxic T cell Activated Cytotoxic T cell Perforin molecules form pores in pathogen cell membrane Memory T cell Cell-mediated Immunity • Helper T-cells facilitate both cellmediated and antibody-mediated immune responses • Cytotoxic T cells function similar to NK cells, however they only see specific MHC I + antigen complexes Memory B and T Cells are Like… Immune Memory • Primary immune response – first exposure to pathogen – recognition, production of B & T cells • 3 to 6 day lag time • antibodies peak in 10 to 12 days – B & T memory cells created – basis for "immunity" from the disease • Secondary immune response – Memory B & T cells immediately identify the pathogen – faster, longer lasting, more effective than the first – at subsequent infection, new legions of B & T cells form in a few days – often no symptoms are noticed