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Response to Pathogens An introduction to the homeostatic mechanisms of the immune system Questions to consider… • • • • • • Is a fever always bad? Should you use alcohols to rid your skin of bacteria? Why do cuts get “pus”? What is an allergy? Do antibodies kill bacteria? Can you get chicken pox twice? Or do you become “immune”? • How does a vaccine activate your immune system? Mechanisms for Defense Innate Immunity rapidly response to common pathogens VS. Adaptive Immunity responses slower with a vast array of receptors (vertebrates only) Emergence of Function • Where does your immune system hang out? White Blood Cells can leak out of blood vessels, collect in lymphatic vessels Types of White Blood Cells Become macrophages and dendritic cells both of which are phagocytes Nonspecific cellular defense • Why not have a specific defense? Why is this useful? Activating Specific Defense • Pathogens carry antigens on their surfaces that must be recognized by lymphocytes – Humoral Response - B-cells and antibodies – Cellular Response - cytotoxic T-cells Overview T-cells vs. B-cells • T-cells (thymus) – Cytotoxic—directly kill bad cells – Helper—activate B-cells • B-cells (bone marrow only) – Produce antibodies Activating Specific Defense • MHC-I: Virus infected; cancerous cells • MHC-II: Macrophages that have eaten bacteria Cytotoxic T • Perforin • CD8 Binding with Class I MHC Helper T • Interleukins and cytokines (chemical signals) • CD4 Binding with MHC II The first time you get sick! • Takes a while for your body to Respond! What happens the next time? • Chicken pox example Not all antibodies are the same • What would someone with allergies have an elevated number of? • How does the fetus get passive immunity? Antibody Structure meets Function Why this works—Clonal Selection How antibodies help Overactive antibodies • Autoimmune disease and inflammatory repsonse • Allergies Putting it all together HIV—A virus that destroys the body’s ability to specifically respond to pathogens What could an HIV test look for? • How could a virusinfected person test negative? Molecular Biology of HIV • Reverse Transcriptase • Envelop proteins • Why don’t we have an HIV Vaccine? Can you be immune to HIV? HIV vs. AIDS • HIV (Virus) infection can cause AIDS (disease) Slowing HIV progression • Stop virus from making copies! Evolution of HIV • SIV—Simian immunodeficiency virus • What does this cladogram show? Why West Africa in the early 1900s? Ecology of Virus Podcast: http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/images/news/hivmap.gif&imgrefurl=http://ev olution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/news/081101_hivorigins&usg=__LKBC7YKCQ8QQBEwhLALCsXETOY=&h=290&w=490&sz=16&hl=en&start=153&itbs=1&tbnid=qUGPxDALz5LYHM:&tbnh=77&tbnw=130&prev=/images%3Fq%3De volution%2Bof%2BHIV%26start%3D140%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DN%26gbv%3D2%26ndsp%3D20%26tbs%3Disch:1