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The remarkable capacity of the immune system to respond to many thousands of different substances with exquisite specificity saves us all from certain death by infection. - Martin C. Raff Include: - Skin - tears and other secretions - contain lysozyme (antibacterial) - inflammatory response - interferons - fever First line of defense - Skin (acts as physical barrier) - Saliva, mucus, and tears (lysozyme) protect where skin is not present (mouth, nose, and eyes) Second line of defense 1. Inflammatory Response - infected area becomes red and painful (inflamed) - mast cells release histamine - histamines increase blood flow to infected area bringing phagocytes that engulf bacteria - local rise in temp. Chemical signals = histamines 2. Interferons - proteins produced to interfere with viral growth - “buy time” for immune system to respond 3. Fever - increased body temp. - may slow growth of pathogen and speeds immune sys. • Distinguishes between “self” and “non-self”; inactivate or kill any foreign substance that enters body. - proteins made by individual recognized as “self” - Recognize chemical markers, no two individuals have the same markers - if markers aren’t recognized, immune response created * Respond to a SPECIFIC pathogen!! Antigens and Antibodies • antigen = foreign substance that stimulates an immune response - outer surface of bacteria, viruses, parasites • antibodies = tag antigens for destruction - may be attached to cells or free floating - 10 billion different ones; each one binding to a specific antigen Lymphocytes • B lymphocytes (B cells) - produced and mature in bone marrow - discover antigens • T lymphocytes (T cells) - produced in bone marrow, mature in thymus - must be presented with antigen • depends on action of antibodies • antibodies on B cells bind to antigen, T cells stimulate growth and division of B cell into two types: 1. Plasma cells - produce and release antibodies that bind to specific antigen 2. Memory B cells - remain alive and react quickly to secondary response - produce new plasma cells - long-term immunity Humoral Immunity Animation • action of macrophages and T cells • when macrophage consumes pathogen a portion of the antigen is displayed on membrane surface • Helper T cells circulate and activate to form more helper T cells • Helper T cells activate B cells, cytotoxic T cells, and make memory T cells CellMediated Immunity Animation See p. 1018 for more detailed diagram Other immune cells include: 1. Cytotoxic T cells - hunt down body cells infected and kill them 2. Suppressor T cells - inhibit immune response when infection under control - may prevent autoimmune diseases The Immune Response