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The Immune System
Chapter 43
Overview
Innate vs. Acquired Immunity
Innate Immunity:
Present from the time of birth
Nonspecific
External barriers, Mucous membranes, macrophages
Acquired Immunity:
Highly specific
Humoral response (antibodies)
Cell-mediated response (cytotoxic lymphocytes)
Innate vs. Acquired Immunity
43 ~1 Innate Immunity
External Defenses:
Skin
Acidic pH
Physical barrier
Mucous membranes
Traps microbes
Antimicobial Proteins - Lysozyme
Enzyme that destroys bacteria
Internal Cellular & Chemical
Defenses
Phagocytosis
The ingestion of invading microorganisms by certain types
of white blood cells
4 white blood cells are phagocytic
Neutrophils
Macrophages
Eosinophils
Dendritic cells
Phagocytosis
Lymphatic system
Internal Cellular & Chemical
Defenses
Antimicrobial Proteins
Attack microbes
Lysozyme
Complement system – 30 proteins that activate when
microbes invade
Interferon – protection against viral infection by limiting
cell to cell reproduction
Internal Cellular & Chemical
Defenses
Inflammatory Response – damage to tissue by physical
injury
Histamine causes increased blood flow to the inured site
(redness & heat = inflammation)
Help deliver antimicrobial proteins and clotting elements
to the injured site
Inflammatory Response
Internal Cellular & Chemical
Defenses
Natural Killer Cells
Patrol the body and attack virus-infected body cells and
cancer cells
Apoptosis – NK cells release chemicals that lead to death of
the cell by apoptosis (programmed cell death)
43 ~ 2 Acquired Immunity
Activates Lymphocytes
Antigen – any foreign molecule that is specifically
recognized by lymphocytes and elicits a response from
them
2 main types of lymphocytes
B lymphocytes (B cells)
T lymphocytes (T cells)
Both circulate through the blood and lymph and are
concentrated in the spleen, lymph nodes, and other
lymphoid tissue
Lymphocyte development
Originate from pluripotent stem cells in the bone
marrow
T cells develop in the Thymus
B cells remain in bone marrow and complete maturation
there
Lymphocyte development
Primary vs. Secondary Immune
response
Primary immune response: occurs the first time the
body is exposed to a particular antigen
Peaks about 10-17 days after exposure
Secondary Immune response: occurs after a second
exposure to the same antigen
Faster
Greater magnitude
More prolonged
Primary vs. Secondary Immune
response
43.3 ~ Humoral & Cell-mediated
response
Humoral immune response – involves the activation and
clonal selection of B cells, resulting in production of
secreted antibodies that circulate in the blood and
lymph
Cell-mediated immune response – involves the
activation and clonal selection of cytotoxic T cells which
directly destroy certain target cells.
Humoral vs. cell-mediated
immune response
43.4 ~ Distinguishing self from
non-self
Blood groups and transfusions
Tissue and organ transplants
Blood groups & Transfusions
A, B, AB, and O blood groups
A red blood cells have A antigens on their surface and
make antibodies against the B antigen.
Transfusion reaction – chills, fever, shock and kidney
malfunction
AB = universal recipient
O = universal donor
Rh negative mother carries a fetus that is Rh positive
mother mounts a humoral response. Danger occurs in
subsequent pregnancies with Rh positive fetus.
Tissue & Organ Transplants
A rejection reaction is mounted in most graft and
transplant recipients because molecules are foreign.
No danger of rejection if the donor and recipient are
identical twins or if tissue is grafted from another part
of the same person’s body.
43.5 ~ Immune system Diseases
Allergies – are exaggerated (hypersensitive) responses to
certain antigens called allergens
Typical allergy symptoms: sneezing, runny nose, tearing
eyes, and smooth muscle contractions
Anaphylactic shock – acute allergic response leads to a
whole-body life-threatening reactions. Responses to
bee venom, penicillin, peanuts, fish
Epinephrine (epipen) counteracts this allergic response
Autoimmune Diseases: The immune system loses
tolerance for self and turns against certain molecules
Lupus – skin rashes, fever, arthritis, and kidney dysfunction
Rheumatoid arthritis – painful inflammation of cartilage
and bond of joints
Multiple Sclerosis – T cells enter CS and destroy myeline
sheath
Arise from some failure in immune system regulation
Immunodeficiency Diseases: The inability of the immune
system to protect the body from pathogens or cancer
cells that it should normally
Inborn (SCID) vs. acquired (AIDS)
Stress & the Immune System: Healthy immune function
depends on both the endocrine system and nervous
system
Hormones secreted by the adrenal glands during stress
affect the # of white blood cells and can suppress the
immune system
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS): Highly
susceptible to infections (Pneumonia, bronchitis)
Loss of helper T cells both humoral and cell-mediated
are imparied
Results from infection by HIV (retrovirus)