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The Human Immune System First lines of defense saliva antibacterial enzymes skin prevents entry stomach acid low pH kills harmful microbes tears antibacterial enzymes mucus linings traps dirt and microbes “good” gut bacteria out compete bad Pathogens • = disease causing micro-organisms • • • • • • bacteria virus fungi protozoa parasites prion Second lines of defense • Involves white blood cells • Non-specific response – invading pathogens are targeted by macrophages (WBC) • Specific response – lymphocytes produce chemicals called antibodies that target specific pathogens Phagocytes The Phagocytes • Phagocytes are the “soldiers” of the immune system • They are responsible for, killing and digesting invading microbes. • The process of swallowing microbes is known as phagocytosis. Phagocytes • Monocytes and macrophages • Provide a non-specific response to infection Phagocytosis The bacteria are digested by enzymes, and then absorbed by the phagocyte During infection, hundreds of phagocytes are needed. Pus is dead bacteria and phagocytes! White Blood Cells Lymphocytes Provide a specific immune response to infectious diseases. There are 2 types: - T-cells B-cells B Cells & T Cells B and T cells perform specialized tasks • B cells recognize antigens and then (as plasma cells) mass-produce specific antibodies • Helper T cells coordinate the attack • Killer T cells once activated, destroy virus-infected cells • T cells “T” = Activated in Thymus Antigen • An antigen is any substance that creates an immune response, from a virus to a sliver. • It can also be incorrectly identified as an invader (allergy response) Bozeman: Immune System • https://www.google.com/search?q=bozem an+immune+system&oq=bozeman+immu ne+system&aqs=chrome..69i57j69i60j69i6 5j69i59j69i61.3104j0j7&sourceid=chrome &es_sm=122&ie=UTF-8 When a virus or bacteria invade the body it is engulfed by a macrophage cell. The macrophage then signals T-cells to cause Bcells to multiply. Macrophage The B Cells get the message from the T-Cells, to produce antibodies which disable the invading bacteria. Antibody Vs Antigen Antigen (the virus) Immune System Can Attack Itself This is the case of autoimmune diseases: – multiple sclerosis – lupus – some forms of arthritis – diabetes – allergies Allergies • The immune system thinks the foreign invader is harmful to you so it “reacts” Anaphylaxis = Life Threatening Reaction Interferon • A small “natural” protein that acts against microbes – ESPECIALLY Viruses • Until recently it was thought that IFN acted ONLY against viruses. • Defense & Repair: DVD – Online https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nqmH9 padTl4&list=PL1BEC62A88CAD28C7 – (KHS Library #824) • Neutrophils "eat" pathogens and send off distress signals. • Monocytes are triggered to turn into pathogen-eating macrophages. • Eosinophils attack parasites • Basophils contain granules filled with histamine and other compounds related to allergies. • The second set of cells — the lymphocytes — is slower to react. • As the generalized campaign goes forward, a second set of specialized cells known as lymphocytes begins a more specific and enduring attack. The stars of this more adaptive immunological defense system — killer T cells, helper T cells, and B cells — work in concert to destroy infected cells. The B cells mature into plasma cells that generate highly specific • antibodies capable of producing lasting immunity. • T cells coordinate the immune system response. • Any material that triggers this immune response is called an antigen.