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Schema What is an antigen?
How do B cells and T cells (generally) work to fight antigens? (use page 936)
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Formation of Lymphocytes
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Surfaces of T cells and B cells
Small portions of antigens called epitopes can bind to the antigen binding sites All antigen receptors on a lymphocyte are the same (identify the same epitope)
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Antibodies Some B cells give rise to plasma cells that produce antibodies which also bind to antigens
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B vs. T cells B cell receptors bind to any antigens – free or on surface of pathogen T cell receptors bind to antigens presented on surface of host cells
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Host cells – MHC molecules
Host cell engulfs pathogen – breaks up antigens and bind to MHC molecules in cell and push antigen to surface of cell Antigen presentation
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T cells and B cells Once host cells present antigens, T cells can recognize antigens Cytotoxic T cells – use toxic gene products to kill infected cells B cells are antigen-presenting cells because they display antigens for recognition by Cytotoxic T cells or Helper T cells
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How can acquired immune response be so effective?
Body contains an enormous variety of antigen receptors and only a small fraction are specific to epitopes The binding of an antigen receptor to its specific antigen initiates events that activate the lymphocyte Activated B cells or T cells amplify response by dividing several times – Clonal selection Figure 43.14 Effector cells Memory cells
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The presentation of an antigen to specific receptors on a lymphocyte leads to repeated rounds of cell divisions Thousands of cells are produced, all specific to that antigen
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Primary vs. Secondary immune response
What is the difference between the primary and secondary immune responses? Why does the secondary response happen so much more quickly in an individual?
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Secondary Response Relies on Memory Cells
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Schema activator 1) What is the difference between the humoral immune response and the cell-mediated immune response? 2) Observe Figure What differences do you notice between the two responses? What is necessary for both to occur?
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Acquired immunity Humoral immune response Activation and clonal selection of effector B cells (secrete antibodies) Cell-mediated immune response Activation and clonal selection of cytotoxic T cells (identify and destroy target cells) What is the role of the helper T cells?
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Helper T Cells Helper T cells are activated when they come in contact with antigen presenting cells They reproduce and cells differentiate into activated helper T cells and memory helper T cells Activated helper T cells secrete cytokines that stimulate the activation of nearby B cells and cytotoxic T cells What are cytokines? Proteins that recruit and activate lymphocytes
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T cells vs. B cells Observe Figures 43.18 and 43.19
How do cytotoxic T cells kill target cells? Do B cells kill cells? How do they respond to pathogens?
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Cytotoxic T cells
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B cell activation
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Antibodies Activated B cells can produce thousands of plasma cells, which each secrete ~2,000 antibodies every second for 4-5 day life span Most antigens contain multiple epitopes, so multiple B cells are activated (producing different plasma cells different antibodies) Classes of antibodies – Figure 43.20 How role of antibodies in immunity – Figure 43.21 Homework – How are monoclonal antibodies used in medicine?
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