The Immune System
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Transcript The Immune System
The Immune System
Chapter 43
Nonspecific Immunity
Helps prevent the entry of microbes:
Skin and mucus membranes – 1st line of defense
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Helps prevent the spread of microbes:
Acidify the skin
Saliva, tears – have antimicrobial proteins
Nostril hairs & mucus
Stomach acids
Phagocytes – destroy themselves and pathogen
Inflammatory response – brings blood and therefore
more phagocytes to the area
Antimicrobial proteins – either directly attack
microbes or interfere with their reproduction
Specific Immunity
The
body responds to a particular type of
infectious agent
Four components:
Specificity
Diversity
Memory
Self/non-self recognition
Lymphocytes
provide the specificity of
the immune system
Specificity
The immune system is able to recognize and
eliminate particular microorganisms and foreign
molecules
This is the job of the lymphocytes
Antigen – a foreign substance that elicits a
specific response by lymphocytes
Antibody – an antigen-binding protein produced
by lymphocytes that functions as the effector in
an immune response; these tag the invading cell
for destruction
Diversity
The ability to respond to the wide variety of
antigens which enter the body is based on the
diversity of antigen-specific lymphocytes present
in the system
The primary immune response is the making
of lymphocytes during the 1st exposure to the
antigen
A secondary immune response occurs when
the body is exposed to the antigen again
Memory
The
ability to recognize a previously
encountered antigen
This is based on memory cells which are
produced during the primary immune
response
Memory cells are not active during the
primary response but survive in the
system for a long time
This is acquired immunity
Self/non-self recognition
The
immune system is able to distinguish
between the body’s own molecules and
foreign antigens
It develops before birth when the
lymphocytes begin to mature
The failure of this ability to recognize self
leads to autoimmune disorders that
destroy the body’s own tissues
Blood groups and transfusion
An example of self/non-self recognition
Type A blood – produces A antigen; makes B
antibodies
Type B blood – produces B antigen; makes A
antibodies
Type AB blood – produces A and B antigen;
makes neither A nor B antibodies
Type O blood – produces neither A nor B
antigen; makes both A and B antibodies
Universal donor – Type O: no antigens
Universal recipients – Type AB: no antibodies
Immune Response: either humoral
or cell-mediated
immunity – antibodies produced
in response to toxins, bacteria, and viruses
present in the body fluids (the ‘humors’)
Cell-mediated immunity – the response
to intracellular bacteria, viruses, fungi,
protozoa, worms, transplanted tissues,
and cancer cells
Humoral
Achieving Immunity
Active immunity – conferred by recovery from
an infectious disease
Depends on response by the person’s own immune
system
May be acquired through illness or vaccination
Passive immunity – transferred from one
person to another
Pregnant or nursing mother to child
Artificially from an animal or another person already
immune to the disease
Abnormal immune function
Allergies – a hypersensitivity to an environmental
antigen
Autoimmune disorders – an immune system reaction
against self
Anaphylactic shock – a life-threatening condition associated with
some allergens such as insect stings or peanuts; epinephrine
may be used as an anecdote
lupus erythematous, rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis,
insulin-dependent (‘juvenile’) diabetes -?
Immunodeficiency diseases – immune system is not
working
Hodgkin’s disease
AIDS