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The Immune System: Why we all don’t look like this I. Sources of Immunity A. Inherited or Acquired 1.Inherited (aka innate or inborn)- from development in the womb 2.Acquired- after birth, from body's exposure to an antigen (NATURAL) or immunization (ARTIFICIAL) (Types of Acquired Immunities) a. Active- own body's response to antigen by making antibody, longer-lasting ex. Measles (nat.), Polio vacc. (artif.) b. Passive- body is given the antibodies directly, temporary but immediate ex. Breast feeding (nat) vs II. Nonspecific defense mechanisms: general, innate barriers to infection A. Mechanical and Chemical Barriers- 1st line 1. Skin and mucosa 2. Secretions like sebum, mucus, enzymes Genetically Modified Skin that is resistant to infection B. Inflammation- 2nd line 1.Mediators released after tissue damage histamine, kinins, prostaglandins 2. Redness, heat, swelling, pain, vasodilation, fever (mild fever good) 3. Chemotaxis- mediators attract more WBC C. Phagocytosis- part of 2nd line- ingestion of microorganisms; pseudopods surround and lysosomes digest Trypanosoma : human parasite that causes African sleeping sickness, transmitted by tsetse flies C. 1. Neutrophil- granular WBC, most numerous, form pus when die 2. Macrophage- aka monocyte, agranular wbc, names differ based on location D. Natural Killer Cells- part of 2nd line 1. Police blood and lymph 2. Lymphocytes lyse tumor cells or viruses E. Interferon- part of 2nd line 1. Protein that interferes with reproduction of viruses and cancer 2. 3 kinds: leukocyte a, fibroblast b, immune g 3. Genetic engineering IFN -2a is indicated for hairy cell leukemia (HCL), acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)-related Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), chronic-phase Philadelphia (Ph) chromosome-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) and chronic hepatitis C (CHC). F. Complements- 2nd line 1. 20 inactive plasms proteins or enzymes that are triggered by pathogens 2. cause lysis by binding to pathogen's surface Increased complement in: •Cancer •Certain infections •Ulcerative colitis Decreased complement in: •Cirrhosis •Glomerulonephritis •Hereditary angioedema •Hepatitis •Kidney transplant rejection •Malnutrition • Tissue macrophages (pink/purple), T lymphocytes (green), and human red blood cells from a leg wound. • A tissue macrophage (pink) is a mature phagocyte that can ingest and destroy invading microbes, foreign particles and cellular debris. • A monocyte (purple)is a circulating phagocyte that ingests microbes, invading particles, and cellular debris. • Lymphocytes are involved in the specific immune response – Precursor T cells (T lymphocytes) • Migrating to the thymus where they develop into specialized cells (helper T and killer T cells) that are able to identify antigens and infected tissue cells – Precursor B cells (B lymphocytes) III. Specific Mechanisms- fight specific invaders; 3rd line Lymphocytes- develop in red blood marrow, fetal liver, lymph nodes, thymus, and spleen B. Antigens aka immunogens- foreign invaders or cancer cells epitope identifies antigen Epitope is what the antibody recognizes C. Antibodies aka immunoglobulins (Ig)•protein made by B cells •contains variable or binding site to join with epitope of antigen 1. Structure a. Y-shaped b. contains 4 polypeptide chains: 2 heavy & 2 light c. variable region differs d. 5 classes: IgM, IgA, IgD, IgE, IgG 2. Functions of antibodies a. forms antigen-antibody complex b. inactivates antigens c. allows macrophages to destroy the complex d. changes shape so complement can lysis e. initiates release of mediators IV. 2 Types of Specific Immunity A. Cell-mediated Immunity (T cells) 1. Have surface receptors that match antigen's epitope 2. When activate, secrete lymphokines or cytokines to promote phagocytosis or release lymphotoxins. 3. Killer T cells- release lymphotoxin; kill cells taken over by virus or cancer 4. Helper T cells- help B cells activate into plasma cells to make antibodies 5. Suppressor T cells- stop T (and B) cells from activating B. Antibody-mediated immunity, aka humoral 1. Inactivated B cells become activated when in contact with epitope of antigen 2. B cells can generate 2000 antibodies/ sec 3. Memory B cells remain and become activated later Types of Immunity Cell-Mediated Humoral (antibody) Major cell type involved T-cells B-cells How cell is activated Self cells or antigen Antigen contacts Bpresenting cells cell (Helper T-cell can co-activate) Response T-cells produce B-cells produce cyto-toxic T-cells plasma cells that that attack antigen produce antibodies presenting cells or helper T-cells that get B-cells involved Memory cells (long-lasting immunity) Memory T-cells T-lymphocytes Memory B-cells V. Organ Transplants and Rejections A. Common since 1970s B. Must check ABO groups C. Post-operation treatment w/ immunosuppressive therapy D. 4 kinds 1.autograph- same person 2.isograph- identical twins 3.allograph- same species 4.xenograph- different species