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Published byRoger Jenkins Modified over 9 years ago
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First response to particular antigen called primary response › May take a week or more to develop Immune system remembers pathogen on subsequent exposure › Termed secondary response Adaptive immunity divided into › Humoral immunity Eliminates extracellular pathogens › Cellular immunity Eliminates intracellular pathogens
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Overview of humoral immunity › Mediated by B lymphocytes a.k.a B cells › Develops in bone marrow › B cells may be triggered to proliferate into plasma cells Plasma cells produce antibodies Antibodies produce when antigen bonds B cell receptor › Some B cells produce memory cells
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Overview of cellular immunity › Mediated by T lymphocytes a.k.a T cells › Matures in thymus › Divided into 2 subsets Cytotoxic T cells Helper T cells T cell receptors help with antigen recognition
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Lymphoid system collection of tissues and organs designed to bring B and T cells in contact with antigens › In order for body to mount appropriate response, immune cells must encounter antigen Lymphoid system includes › Lymphatic vessels › Secondary lymphoid organs › Primary lymphoid organs
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Lymphatic vessels › Carry lymph to body tissues Lymph formed as result of body’s circulatory system › Lymph travels through vessels to lymph nodes Material such as protein is removed Fluid portion empties back into blood stream
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Secondary lymphoid organs › Sites where lymphocytes gather to encounter antigens; organs include Lymph nodes Spleen Tonsils Adenoids Appendix › Organs situated strategically Allows for initiation of immune response from nearly any place in body
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Primary lymphoid organs › Bone marrow and thymus are primary lymphoid organs Location where stem cells destined to become B and T cells mature B cells mature in bone marrow T cells mature in thymus Once mature, cells leave primary lymphoid organs and migrate to secondary lymphoid organs
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Coined from compounds that elicit antibody production › Anti body gen erator Includes an enormous variety of materials Today, term used to describe any compound that elicits an immune response › Antigen that causes immune response termed immunogen Proteins and polysaccharides induce string response › Lipids and nucleic acids often do not Recognition of antigen directed at antigenic determinant or epitope
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Structure of the Antibody (Ab) › Basic Y-shaped structure › Made of four chains of amino acids held together by disulfide bonds Two chains are heavy Two chains are light › Each heavy and light chain has a constant region The constant region is known as Fc region › Each heavy and light chain has a variable region Variable region is unique to each Ab This region binds to a specific Antigen and is known as “Fab” region
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Protective outcomes of antibody-antigen binding › Neutralization Prevents toxin from interacting with cell › Immobilization and prevention of adherence Antibody bonding to cellular structures to interfere with function › Agglutination and precipitation Clumping of bacterial cells by specific antibody Bacteria more easily phagocytized
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Protective outcomes of antibody-antigen binding › Opsinization Coating of bacteria with antibody to enhance phagocytosis › Complement activation Antibody bonding triggers classical pathway › Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity Multiple antibodies bind a cell which becomes target for certain cells
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Five classes of Ab › IgM First Ab to respond to infection 5 – 13% of Ab in circulation Structure: pentamer Five monomer units joined together at the constant region Found on the surface of B lymphocytes as a monomer Only Ab that can be formed by the fetus
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Five classes of Ab › IgG Dominant Ab in circulation 80 – 85% Ab in circulation Structure = monomer Only Ab that can cross the placenta The antibody of memory!!!!! › IgA Found in secretions 10 - 13 % of Ab in circulation Structure Monomer in serum Dimer in secretions Breast milk, mucus, tears and saliva
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Five classes of Ab › IgD <1% of total Ab in circulation Structure = monomer Maturation of antibody response › IgE Barely detectable in circulation Structure = monomer Active in allergic reaction
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When antigen introduces into body, only appropriate antibody bonds › Initiates multiplication of specific antigen Process called clonal selection Repeated cycles of cell division generates population of copied antibodies Termed clonal expansion Without sustained stimulation, cells undergo apoptosis
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Lymphocyte characteristics include › Immature Antigen specific receptors not fully developed › Naive Have antigen receptor but have not encountered antigen › Activated Able to proliferate Have bound antigen › Effectors Descendents of activated lymphocytes Able to produce specific cytokines Plasma cells, T helper and cytotoxic T cells effector cells › Memory lymphocytes Long-lived descendents of activated lymphocytes Memory cells responsible for seed and effectiveness of secondary response Remembers antigen on subsequent exposure
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Antigen binds to B cell receptor › Poises B cell to respond In many cases B cell needs conformation from helper T cells Ag enters the body and is phagocytized and processed by macrophages › These macrophages destroy Ag and present a portion on the surface of the macrophage next to self Ag Macrophages are called antigen-presenting cells (APC) Processed Ag combines with specific T H with the appropriate receptor APC releases substances to activate T H cell T H cell activates B cells to divide and differentiate › Produce plasma cells and memory B cells
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Characteristic of primary response › Lag period of 10 to 12 days occurs before antibody detection in blood Activated B cells proliferate and differentiate into increasing numbers of plasma cells as long as antigen is present › Net result is slow steady increase in antibody titer
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Over time, some B cells undergo changes enhancing immune response including Affinity maturation Class switching Formation of memory cell Affinity maturation › Form of natural selection Occurs among proliferating B cells › Fine tunes quality of response with respect to specificity B cell receptors more and more specific to antigen Antibody bonds antigen more tightly
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Class switching › B cells initially programmed to differentiate into plasma cells Plasma cells secrete IgM antibodies › Helper T cells produce cytokines Some B cells switch programming Differentiate to plasma cells that secrete other classes of antibodies Commonly IgG
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Formation of memory › B cells that have undergone class switching Produce IgG antibody IgG is antibody of memory IgG antibody can circulate in body for years allowing protection against specific antigens
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Characteristics of secondary response › Memory cells responsible for swift effective reaction of secondary response Often eliminate invaders before noticeable harm is done › Vaccine exploits phenomenon of immunologic memory › Some memory B cells will differentiate into plasma cells Results in rapid production of antibodies
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T-independent antigens › Can stimulate antibody response Activate B cells without helper T cells Few antigens are T- independent › B cell receptors bind antigen simultaneously Leads to B cell activation › Some polysaccharides and lipopolysaccharides act as T-independent antigens
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General characteristics of T cells › Have multiple copies of T cell receptors Receptors have variable sites of antigen bonding › Role of T cells different from B cells T cells never produce antibodies T cells armed with effectors that interact directly with antigen T cell receptor does not react with free antigen Antigen must be present by APC
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General Characteristics › During antigen presentation, antigen cradled in grove of major histocompatability complex molecule (MHC molecule) Two types MHC MHC class I Bind endogenous antigen MHC class II Bind exogenous antigen
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General characteristics › Two major function T cell populations Cytotoxic T cells Proliferate and differentiate to destroy infected or cancerous “self” cells Have CD8 marker Recognize MHC class I Helper T cells Multiply and develop into cells that activate B cells and macrophages Stimulate other T cells; orchestrate immune response Have CD4 marker Recognize antigen display by MHC class II
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Functions of Tc (CD8) cells › Induce apoptosis in “self” cells Cells infected with virus or intracellular microbe Destroys cancerous “self” cells › Nucleated cells degrade portion of proteins Load peptides into groove of MHC class I molecule MHC class I molecule recognized by circulating Tc cell Cell destroyed by lethal effector function of Tc cell Tc cells releases pre-formed cytokines to destroy cell
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Functions of T H (CD4) cells › Orchestrate immune response Recognize antigen presented by MHC class II molecules MHC class II molecules found only on APC If T H cell recognizes antigen, cytokines are delivered Cytokines activate APC to destroy antigen
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Role of T H cells in B cell activation › If T H cell encounters B cell bearing peptide: MHC calls II complex T H cell responds by producing cytokines › B cell is activated in response to cytokine stimulation B cell proliferates and undergoes class switching Also drives formation of B memory cells
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Role of T H cells in macrophage activation › Macrophages routinely engulf invading microbes resistant to lysosomal killing › T H cells recognize macrophage with engulfed microbes resistant to killing › T H cells activate macrophages by delivering cytokines that induce more potent destructive mechanisms
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Natural killer cells descend from lymphoid stem cells › They lack antigen specificity No antigen receptors Recognize antigens by means of Fc portion of IgG antibodies Allow NK cells to attach to antibody-coated cells Actions augment adaptive immune response › Important in process of antibody dependent cellular toxicity Enable killing of host cells with foreign protein in membrane Natural killer cells recognize destroyed host cells with no MHC class I surface molecules › Important in viral infection
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During lymphocyte development, B and T cells acquire ability to recognize distinct epitopes › Once committed to specific antigen, cells “checked out” to ensure proper function › B cells undergo developmental stages in bone marrow › T cells go through process in thymus
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