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Chapter 39 IMMUNITY: A SUMMARY AP Biology Spring 2011 Integrated Responses To Threats  Immunity: body’s capacity to resist and combat infection, began when multicelled eukaryotic species evolved from free-living cells Integrated Responses To Threats  Mutations introduced molecular patterns in membrane proteins that were unique to cells of a given type  Mutations led to mechanisms of identifying those proteins as belonging self- one’s own body  And ability to identify nonself Integrated Responses To Threats  Antigen: any molecule that the body recognizes as nonself that revokes an immune response  Most are proteins, lipids, and oligosaccharides  Pattern receptors: used to detect patterns that are present mainly on pathogenic cells  Anything that became bound to hem induced an animal cell to release complement (a set of about 30 proteins) which circulate in blood and destroy microbes or tag them for phagocytes Integrated Responses To Threats  The microbial pattern receptors and complement offered innate immunity- fast, off-the-shelf responses to a fixed set of nonself cues  Does not protect against novel or unrecognized threats , adapting to them isn’t possible in an individual’s lifetime Integrated Responses To Threats  Evolution of cytokines and lymphocytes  Lymphocytes: specialized class of WBC  Together these signals and cells could tailor defenses to an astounding array of specific threats that an individual encountered during its lifetime  Adaptive immunity Three Lines of Defense Pathogens cannot do damage unless they can enter the internal environment 1.   Intact skin and lining of body tubes and cavities Physical and chemical protection 2. Innate immunity  Starts immediately after antigen has been detected or after a tissue has become damaged  WBC, complement, acute inflammation, and fever 3. Adaptive immunity  Large populations of WBC form, all sensitized to a specific threat The Defenders  Leukocytes: all WBC that arise from stem cells in bone marrow The Defenders  Many kinds  Neutrophils: most abundant of WBC, fast acting phagocytes  Macrophages: slower, bigger eaters, can get rid of as many as 100 bacterial cells  Dendrite cells: alert immune system to the presence of antigen The Defenders  Many kinds:  Basophils and Mast Cells: circulate in blood (basophils) and tissues (mast cells) and release enzymes and cytokines in response to antigen or injury  Eosinophils: secrete enzymes and toxic proteins that are good at punching holes in larvae of parasitic worms  B and T Lymphocytes: are central to adaptive immunity  Natural killer cells: innate immune response, also participate in adaptive immunity, directly kill body cells that are infected, stressed, or mutated, as by cancerous transformations Immunalogy  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T_4TrNRa3v8& feature=related  Watch the video  Draw a diagram to separate innate and adaptive immunity Surface Barriers- The First Line of Defense  Your skin is teeming with about 200 different kinds of microbes  Skin is waterproof covering of dead, keratin packed epithelial cell layers  Normal skin resident populations of microbes have neutral or helpful impacts on health Staphylococcus epidermidis , the most common species on skin and a leading cause of bacterial infections Linings of Tubes and Cavities  Body has defenses that normally keep microbes outside on the surface of linings  Mucus: coating on free surface of epithelial linings   Consists of glycoproteins (mucins) and salts in water Lysozyme: enzyme that cleaves peptidoglycans in bacterial cell walls and disrupts their structure  Tears have lysozymes Linings of Tubes and Cavities  Breathing in air:  Mucus coated epithelial lining of airways  Coughing expels many cells, lysozymes in mucus kill others  Lining has ciliated cells, cilia beat in synchrony at its free surface, which sweeps the bacteria laden mucus to throat for disposal Linings of Tubes and Cavities  In the mouth  If microbes make it to the stomach, low pH kills most  If make it to small intestine bile salts in intestinal lumen usually kill them  If make it to large intestine, must compete with 500 or so established species and if they do displace the residents a flushing mechanism (diarrhea) usually gets rid of them Linings of Tubes and Cavities  Urinary tract and vagina  Lactic acid, byproduct of fermentation by Lactobacillus   Helps keep vaginal pH beyond range of tolerance for most bacteria and fungi Flushing action of urination normally keeps most pathogens from colonizing in urinary tract Uneasy Balance  Must keep microbes outside body  Surface barriers are vulnerable  When we become sick or weak with age, changes in physiology may compromise them  Examples:   Acne Plaque deposits, periodontitis Innate Immune Response  Phagocytes:  Macrophages arrive first: engulf and digest anything other than undamaged body cells  Their pattern receptors recognize and bind to pathogen secreting cytokines which signal more macrophages and neutrophils Innate Immune Response  Complement Proteins:  Also arrive first  Bind to circulating microbes or to antigen being displayed at phagocyte’s surface which causes a positive feedback mechanism  One bound molecule becomes activated  then activates a few molecules of a different type of complement  then activates some of a different type, etc.  Cascading reactions yield high concentrations of activated complement in localized tissue region Innate Immune Response  Activated complement proteins have many effects  Chemotactic: attract phagocyte cells (phagocytes follow gradients to site of damage, where complement is most concentrated)  Some bind to microbes: microbes coated with complements will get recognized and engulfed faster by phagocytes  Some assemble into attack complexes in cell wall or plasma membrane and promote bacterium’s lysis  Also function in adaptive immunity Innate Immune Response  Acute Inflammation: swift response from to tissue irritation or tissue damage  Cytokines secretions from macrophages and activated complement trigger this  Symptoms: redness, warmth, swelling, pain Innate Immune Response  Steps of acute inflammation  Mast cells respond to complement cascades or to antigen  Secrete histamine and cytokines into interstitial fluid  Histamine makes arterioles in tissue dilate  increases blood flow to the area (causes warmth and redness)  Histamine makes blood capillaries in the tissue “leaky” to plasma proteins that usually do not leave blood  Causes endothelial cells of capillary wall to shrink, cells pull further apart at clefts between them  Plasma proteins and phagocytes slip out Innate Immune Response  Steps of acute inflammation continued  Osmotic pressure in interstitial fluid rises, fluid balance across the capillary wall shifts, localized edema (swelling)  Swollen tissue cause free nerve endings to give rise to sensations of pain; suppresses voluntary movements (allows for tissue repair)  Other plasma proteins leaking into interstitial fluid include clotting factors, macrophage secretions activate them Innate Immune Response  Fever: rise in body temperature above the normal set point on a built in thermostat in hypothalamus  Macrophages bring about fever as innate immune response     Secrete pyrogenic cytokines which stimulates brain to synthesize and release several kinds of prostaglandins Prostaglandins act in hypothalamus to raise thermostat set point Fever of 39 degrees C, enhances immunity by increasing enzyme activity and speeding metabolism (formation and action of phagocytes accelerates, so does tissue repair) Also pop. Of many microbes grow slowly at high temp.s Features of Adaptive Immunity  Four characteristics of vertebrate active immunity 1. Self/nonself recognition 2. Specificity 3. Diversity 4. Memory Features of Adaptive Immunity  Self versus nonself recognition  Every cell or virus has its own identity  Human cells have markers: human leukocyte antigens (HLA), also known as MHC markers (major histocompatibility complex)  T cells have TCRs: antigen receptors at their surface  T cells normally do not target body cell that has bare MHC markers, but will act against it if those markers have antigen bits attached Features of Adaptive Immunity  Specificity  New B or T cell makes receptors for one kind of antigen  Diversity:  Refers to collection of antigen receptors on all B and T cells is the body  Potentially billions of different antigen receptors, gives potential to counter billions of different threats Features of Adaptive Immunity  Memory  Immune system’s capacity to “remember” antigen that it vanquished  First time lymphocytes recognize an antigen, takes a few days to for their populations to form  When the same antigen shows up again, system makes faster, hightened response First Step: The Antigen Alert  Recognition stimulates repeated mitotic cell divisions  Result is large populations of B and T cells, primed to recognize antigen First Step: The Antigen Alert      Macrophages, B cells, dendritic cells are antigen presenting cells and find antigens and present them to T cell (receptors recognize antigens) First engulf anything bearing antigen, vesicles move into the cytoplasm Vesicle fuses with lysomes, enzymes digest antigens Some fragments bind to MHC markers Antigen-MHC complexes shuttled to plasma membrane and are displayed First Step: The Antigen Alert  When a cell’s MHC markers become paired with antigen     fragments, it becomes a call to arms Odds are at least one T cell has receptors that can bind Binds, becomes activated and secretes cytokines that induce divisions of B or T cells sensitive to same antigen Effector cells: differentiated lymphocytes that act immediately against antigen Memory cells: long lived B and T cells that develop during first exposure and set aside for future encounters Two Arms of Adaptive Immunity  Antibody Mediated Immune Response  Pathogens in blood or interstitial fluid intercepted by phagocytes and B cells  B cells execute most of this response  T cells support Two Arms of Adaptive Immunity  Cell mediated immune response  Intracellular pathogens  Vulnerable only for brief time when they slip out of one cell and infect another  This response does not acquire antibodies  Starts after antigen becomes positioned at surface of infected or altered body cells where phagocytes and cytotoxic T cells detect it Intercepting and Clearing Out Antigens  After engulfing antigen, dendritic cells and macrophages enter a lymph node  In lymph node, both kinds of phagocytes alert the T cells to the threat  Free antigen in interstital fluid enters lymph vessels which deliver it to lymph nodes where it passes B cells, macrophages, and dendritic cells that can bind, process, and present it to T cells  Lymph nodes trap most antigen- some could circulate to blood! Spleen helps filter again! Intercepting and Clearing Out Antigens  During infection:  Antigen-presenting T cells become trapped briefly in lymph nodes  Swollen lymph nodes sign of illness and lymphocyte activity  Immune response subside once antigen is cleared away B Cells: The Antibodies  Antibodies: proteins synthesized only by B cells that encounter and bind antigen    Many Y shaped Most circulate in blood and enter interstitial fluid during inflammation Each acts spcifically against the antigen that promoted its synthesis B Cells: The Antibodies  Structure of Antibodies:  Four polypeptide chains  Two identical “light” ones  Two identical “heavy” ones  Each chain has constant region, forms molecules backbone  One end of each chain has variable region- domain for one antigen B Cells: The Antibodies  5 structural classes of antibodies called Immunoglobulins (Igs)      IgG IgA IgM IgE IgD  B cell secretes them, circulate alone or in clumps B Cells: The Antibodies  IgG  80% of all immunoglobulins in blood  Induces complement cascades, neutralizes toxins  Crosses placenta, protects fetus with mother’s aquired immunities  Secreted into early milk (colostrum) B Cells: The Antibodies  IgA  Main immunoglobulin in exocrine gland secretions  Tears, saliva, milk  In mucus of respiratory, digestive, and reproductive tracts B Cells: The Antibodies  IgE  Induces inflammation after pathogen invasions  Constant regions of its heavy chains become anchored to mast cells, basophils, monocytes, or dendritic cells  Makes these cells release histamines and cytokines  Factor in allergic reactions and HIV infection B Cells: The Antibodies  IgM  First to be secreted in primary response and first made by newborns  Surface of each new B cell is covered with hundreds of thousands of IgM or IgD antibodies, each of which recognizes the same antigen  Antibodies are B cell receptors, surface immunoglobulins that function as B cell’s antigen receptors The Making of Antigen Receptors  B cells  Before new B cell leaves bone marrow, already synthesizing unique antigen receptors  Constant region of each is positioned in lipid bilayer of B cell’s plasma membrane  Two variable arms project above it  B cell will have 100,000 antigen receptors  “naïve” B cell- has not yet met its antigen B Cells: The Antibodies  T cells:  Form inside bone marrow  Do not mature until they take a tour through thymus gland  After exposure to thymic hormones, get receptors for MHC proteins  Also get TCR’s, unique antigen receptors by gene splicing  These recombination’s are random , some TCRs end up recognizing MHC markers rather than antigen, many will not B Cells: The Antibodies  To get a functional set of T cells  Thymus cells produce small peptides that are derived from a variety of the body’s proteins  Peptides get attached to MHC markers, act as built in quality controls to weed out “bad” TCRs  Any T cell that binds too tightly to one of complexes, has TCRs that recognize self peptide  T cells that do not bind at all cannot recognize MHC markers  Both types die  By the time naïve T cells leave the thymus, their surface contains functional TCRs The Antibody Mediated Response  Main targets of antibody mediated response are extracellular pathogens and toxins freely circulating in blood and interstitial fluid  Nick your finger, staphlococcus aureus invades  Complement in interstitial fluid latches on to carbohydrates in their bacterial cell wall and activates cascading reactions  Complement coats bacteria  Bacteria move through lymph vessels to lymph node, where paraded past naïve B cells The Antibody Mediated Response  B cells bear immunoglobulins that bind to peptidoglycan in bacterium’s cell wall  Bears complement receptors that bind to complement that coats the invading cell  These 2 events provoke B cell to begin receptormediated endocytosis  Bacterium enters B cell, which is no longer naïve, now activated The Antibody Mediated Response  Meanwhile, more S. aureus cells have been secreting chemotactic factors into interstitial fluid around cut  Secretions attract phagocytes  Dendritic cell engulfs some bacteria, then migrates to the lymph node  It has digested the bacteria cell and displays antigen fragments bound to MHC markers on its surface The Antibody Mediated Response  Naïve T cells travel through the lymph nodes at all times, inspect dendritic cells  One of T cells has TCRs that tightly bind to S. aureus antigen-MCH complexes on dendritic cell  For the next 24h, two cells interact  Transcription factors activated in T cell  Two cells disengage, T cell returns to circulatory system The Antibody Mediated Response  Theory of clonal selection  S. aureus antigen “chose” that T cell because it bears a receptor that can bind to it  After T cell is activated, many descendents form by mitotic cell divisions  They are clones- one lineage of genetically identical cells  Differentiates into helper T cells, all with identical TCRs specific for S. aureus antigen The Antibody Mediated Response  Back to the B cell in lymph nodes  Fragments of S. aureus are bound to MHC markers and displayed at the B cells surface  Two cells latch on to each other and exchange costimulatory signals  Helper T cells secretes several interleukins- cytokines that signal B cell to divide and differentiate The Antibody Mediated Response  When cells disengage, B cell divides, its clonal descendents form huge populations, with identical receptors  Differentiate into effector and memory cells The Antibody Mediated Response  Effector cells work immediately in primary immune response or against initial exposure to antigen  Instead of making membrane bound IgM as B cell receptors, they switch antibody classes  Start making and secreting IgG, IgA, or IgE instead  Each of secreted antibody molecules has same antigen specificity as original B cell receptor The Antibody Mediated Response  Great numbers of antibody molecules specific for S. aureus are now circulating through body  Bind bacterial cells remaining in blood stream and interstitial fluid  Prevent them from attaching to body tissues and also tag them for disposal for NK cells and complement  Neutralize toxic agents THE CELL-MEDIATED RESPONSE As long as virus, bacteria, fungi, and protists hide in host cell, antibody mediated response cannot be initiated  During acute inflammatory response, cell mediated defenses against these menacing threats get under way in interstitial fluid  Usually plasma membrane of infected body cell displays antigen- peptides of intracellular pathogen or self proteins that were altered by cancerous tranformation  THE CELL-MEDIATED RESPONSE Dendritic cells recognize, engulf, and digest these antigens as bits of diseased or abnormal cells or their remains  Dendritic cells then travel to lymph nodes, where antigen-MCH complexes on their surface are presented to 2 different populations of naïve T cells  Both types are activated when their receptors bind to antigen-MCH complexes on the dendritic cells  Clonal decendents of one population differentiate into effector helper T cells, which secrete interleukins and other cytokines  These signal induce other type of T cell to divide and differentiate into cytotoxic T cells  THE CELL-MEDIATED RESPONSE Cytotoxic T cells circulate through body in blood and interstitial fluid  Bind to any cell bearing original antigen that is complexed with MHC markers  Inject it with perforin and proteases  These toxins poke holes into cell and induce it to die by apoptosis  Cytotoxic T cells are body’s primary weapons against infected body cells and tumors  Also cause rejection of tissue and organ implants  THE CELL-MEDIATED RESPONSE Cytokines secreted by some helper T cells enhance macrophage action  Stimulate these phagocytes to secrete more inflammatory mediators and toxins that help kill tumor cells and larger parasites  Helper T cell cytokines also stimulate cell divisions of NK cells  THE CELL-MEDIATED RESPONSE Natural killer cells attack cells that are tagged for destruction by antibodies  Also detect  Stress markers on infected or cancerous body cells  Cell that has normal MCH markers is not killed  Cell with MCH markers that have been altered will die  NK cells and macrophages are crucial in killing such cells; neither depends on presence of MCH markers  Defenses Enhanced or Compromised  Immunization: processes that may promote immunity  Active immunization: preparation that contains antigen (a vaccine) is administered orally or injected into body    First injection elicits primary immune response Second one, booster, elicits secondary response Additional effector and memory cells form for lasting protection Defenses Enhanced or Compromised  Vaccines can be made from  Weakened or killed pathogens or inactivated bacterial toxins  Harmless viruses that have genes from other pathogens inserted into their DNA or RNA  Passive Immunization  Helps if hepatitis B, tetanus, rabies, have already started  Based on injections of antibody purified from blood of a person who already fought disease  Antibodies do not activate body’s immune system, memory cells do not form  Protection ends when body disposes of injected antibody Defenses Enhanced or Compromised  Allergies: hypersensitivity to an allergen  Exposure to harmless proteins that stimulates immune response  Allergen: any substance that is ordinarily harmless yet provokes immune response  Antihistamines or anti-inflammatory drugs relieve symptoms as can desensitization programs (allergy shots)  Anaphylactic shock: life threatening response to allergen Defenses Enhanced or Compromised  Autoimmune Disorders  When lymophocytes and antibody molecules fail to discriminate between self and nonself  Autoimmune response: misdirected attack against one’s own tissues  Ex. Rheumatoid arthritis, Graves disease, multiple sclerosis Defenses Enhanced or Compromised  Deficient Immune Responses  Loss of immune function can have lethal outcomes  Primary deficiencies, present at birth, are outcomes of mutant genes or abnormal developmental steps   Ex. SCIDs, ADA Secondary deficiencies are losses of immune function after exposure to some outside agent  Ex. 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