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Immunology Chapter 43
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Innate Immunity Present and waiting for exposure to pathogens Non-specific External barriers and internal cellular and chemical defenses
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Aquired Immunity Specific Develops after exposure WBC’s involved in B and T cell immunity Involve antibodies
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Innate and Aquired Immunity
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Innate Immunity – External Defenses Skin Mucous membranes Cilia Oil glands Sweat glands Stomach acid Lysozyme in saliva, tears, and mucous
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Innate Immunity – Cellular and Chemical Defenses Phagocytosis Antimicrobial proteins Inflammation Fever Natural Killer Cells
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Phagocytosis Ingest invading organisms Produce antimicrobial proteins and initiate inflammation Ex: neutrophils, macrophages,, eosinophils, dendritic cells
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Types of Phagocytes Neutrophils- most abundant, ingest and destroy invaders Macrophages – found in spleen, lymph Eosinophils – defend against parasites by secreting enzymes Dendritic Cells – ingest microbes and are involved in development of aquired immunity
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Lymph System Role in the Immune System
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Antimicrobial Proteins Complement system – composed of about 30 different microbial proteins which cause the lysis of the invading cell Ex: interferon: fight against viral infections, secreted by virus infected cells that warn neighboring cells
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Inflammatory Response Heat, swelling, redness and pain Caused by histamines that are released by damaged cells (cause vessel dilation) Allows for more WBC and quicker clotting Fever – allows for phagocytosis and increase killing of pathogen
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Natural Killer Cells Attack virus infected and body cells by releasing chemicals that cause cell death
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Aquired Immunity Humoral and cell mediated immunity Macrophages secrete cytokines that activate the aquired immune system
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Epitopes (antigenic determinants) Antigen – molecule that causes an immune response, can be from a pathogen or another type of cell Epitope – the antigentic determinant area, where the antibody will bond
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Anitgen Recongition 2 types of lymphocytes (WBC’s) recongnize antigens – B and T cells B cell have Y shaped molecules (AKA anitbodies or immunoglobulins) that are composed of 2 heavy chains and two light chains – the tips of the molecules are specific to different antigens (called the V region)
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Anitbody Structure
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T Cell Receptors Recognize antigens that are bound to a normal cell protein called a MHC- major histocompatibility complex The MHC binds with the antigen on the membrane of a normal cell – called antigen presentation Class I MHC – bind antigens of molecules formed in the cells (infected cells)- recognized by cytotoxic T cells Class II MHC – bind antigens that have been internalized though phagocytosis (ex: dendritic cells and macrophages)- recognized by helper T cells
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Lymphocyte Development Lymphocytes that go to the thymus turn into T cells, while ones that develop in the bone marrow turn into B cells When one of these cells encounters an antigen for the first time, it stimulates it activation and proliferation – call clonal selection
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Lymphocyte Diversity The specificity to antigens is vast There are 1 million different V regions in B cells and 10 million different V regions in T cells all coded for by differential gene splicing If a region is made that codes for one’s own body antigen it will be destroyed – this keeps self vs. non-self recognition
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B and T Cell Development
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Clonal Selection Once a B or T cell has been activated it will form 2 clones One clone will make effector cells (that will work to fight the antigen) The other clone will make memory cells
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Clonal Selection
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Immunological Memory Primary Immune Response – slow, must go through clonal selection Secondary Immune Response – fast due to the presence of memory cells
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Humoral Immunity B cells Make antibodies Rely on helper T cells
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Humoral Immune Response
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Antibodies Produced by B cells 5 different classes – differ only in their V regions Bind to antigens causing viral neutralization, opsonization, or agglutination
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Cell Mediated Immunity Cytotoxic T cells - directly destroy certain cells or secretes chemicals that cause the destruction of cells kill infected and cancerous cells Rely on helper T cells
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Humoral and Cell Mediated Activation
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Continued…
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The Killing Action of Cytotoxic T Cells
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Active and Passive Immunity Active – permenant; caused by natural exposure or vaccines that lead to memory cells Vaccine – weaken or dead pathogen Passive – temporary; given through pregnancy, breast milk or anitbody injection
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Self vs. Non Self Blood Types Organ Transplants
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Blood Groups Type O Type A Type B Type AB Rh Factor
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Immune Diseases Allergies Autoimmune Diseases Immunodeficiency Diseases ex: HIV/AIDS
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