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The Immune System. CAMPBELL and REECE Chapter 43. Innate Immunity. nonspecific defense that is active immediately upon infection found in all animals & plants includes: outer covering skin or shell chemical secretions @ openings to interior of body. Immune System.
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The Immune System CAMPBELL and REECE Chapter 43
Innate Immunity • nonspecific defense that is active immediately upon infection • found in all animals & plants • includes: • outer covering • skin or shell • chemical secretions • @ openings to interior of body
Immune System • must be able to identify nonself from self • detection determined by molecular recognition of receptor molecules
Adaptive Immunity • found only in vertebrates • very specific • aka acquired immune response • activated after innate responses & develops more slowly
Innate Immunity of Insects • only have innate immunity • 1st line of defense (barrier defenses) • Exoskeletons: effective against most pathogens: made of polysaccharide, chitin
Innate Immunity in Insects: Barrier Defenses • lining of intestine: • has chitin where it blocks infection by pathogens ingested in food • secretes lysozyme, enzyme that breaks down bacterial cell walls
Insect’s Internal Immune Responses • if pathogen gets by barrier defenses: • hemocytes: immune cells in hemolymph • some can phagocytose • others secrete chemicals that kill pathogens & help entrap large parasites (like Plasmodium) • interaction with pathogens some secrete antimicrobial peptides circulate in hemolymph
Insect Immune Cells • bind to molecules unique to outer layers of fungi, or bacteria • fungal cells: polysaccharides • bacteria: combinations of sugars & a.a. not found in animal cells
Innate Responses • unique for different classes of pathogens
Innate Immunity in Vertebrates • coexists with adaptive immunity mechanisms • 2 are strongly interdependent • basis same as innate immunity in invertebrates but there are additions • most research done on mammals
Barrier Defenses • epithelial tissues block entry of many pathogens • skin • mucous membranes • line organs that have opening to outside of body • mucus: viscous fluid that blocks microbes & other particles • saliva, tears have “washing” action keeping microbes from colonizing
Barrier Defenses • cellular secretions • lysozyme kills by breaking down cell walls • saliva, tears dilute & prevent colonization • sweat pH 3 – 4 • stomach pH 2
Internal Innate Defenses 1. phagocytes • cells that can detect fungi & bacteria • use several types of receptors: • Toll-like receptor (TLR) binds to fragments of molecules characteristic of set of pathogens • similar mechanism used in insects
TLR • TLR3 • sensor for dsRNA (viral) • TLR4 • recognizes lipopolysaccharide (surface of many bacteria) • TLR5 • recognizes flagellin (bacterial flagella protein)
Types of Phagocytic Cells • Neutrophils • circulate in blood • attracted by signals sent from infected cells • Macrophages • larger cells migrate thru tissues or reside permanently in organs/tissues likely to have invaders
Types of Phagocytic Cells 3. Dendritic cells • mainly found in tissues that contact outside (skin) • stimulate adaptive immunity after engulfing pathogen 4. Eosinophils • found beneath mucous membranes • low phagocytic activity • speciality: able to defend against parasitic worms secrete enzymes
Natural Killer Cells • circulate thru body detecting abnl surface proteins of cells infected with virus or cancer cells • on detection secrete chemicals that kill affected cell
Lymphatic System • network of vessels that connect lymphatic tissues thru out body • ICF lymph vessels venous drainage • some macrophages in lymph nodes
Lymphatic System • dendritic cells migrate to lymph node after interacting with pathogen interact with other immune cells stimulating adaptive immunity attack • aka APCs: Antigen-Presenting Cells
Pathogen Recognition Triggers: • release of peptides & proteins attack pathogens or impede their reproduction
Interferons • proteins released in response to viral infection • vertebrates only • now used in early treatment
Complement System • ~30 proteins in plasma • circulate in inactive state • activated by substances on surfaces of some microbes • activation starts cascade of reactions lysis of invading cells
Inflammatory Response • innate immune defense triggered by physical injury or infection of tissue involving the release of substances that promote swelling, enhance the infiltration of WBCs, & aid in tissue repair & destruction of invading pathogens
Histamine • 1 of inflammatory signaling molecules • stored in granules of mast cells (in CT)
Cytokines • group of small protein secreted by # of cell types: • macrophages • helper T cells • regulate function of other cells to enhance immune response • promote increased blood flow to injured area • causes redness & increased skin temp • engorged capillaries leak fluid localized swelling
Some Pathogens Evade Innate Immunity • Bacteria: • some have outer capsule that interferes with recognition & phagocytosis • Streptococcus pneumoniae
Adaptive Immunity • unique to vertebrates • relies on lymphocytes
Thymus • organ in thoracic cavity • some new lymphocytes travel from bone marrow thymus & are “taught” how to respond in immune attack mature into T cells
B Cells • lymphocytes that stay in bone marrow to mature • become effector cells for humoral immune response
Antigen (agn) • substance that elicits an immune response by binding to receptors of B cells, antibodies, or of T cells • example: bacterial or viral protein • agn receptor: general term for a surface protein, on B or T cells, that binds to agns, initiating adaptive immune responses
agn receptors • specific enough to bind to just one part of 1 molecule from particular pathogen • 1 B cell or 1 T cell makes only 1 specific receptor • ~ 100,000 agn receptors on 1 B or T cell
agns • usually large foreign molecules (proteins or polysaccharides most often) • stick out surface of foreign cells or virus • molecule of toxin secreted by bacteria
Epitopes • small, accesible region of agn to which an agn receptor or antibody (aby) binds • aka: agn determinant
Epitopes • single agn typically has several different epitopes each will bind to receptor with different specificity • agn receptors of B & T cells encounter agns differently
Recognition of agn by B Cells B cell agn receptors “Y” shaped made of 4 polypeptide chains2 identical heavy chains 2 identical light chains disulfide bridges link them
B Cell Antigen Receptor • heavy chains extend into cytoplasm anchor receptor • light & heavy chains have “constant”(C) region (nearly same on all B cells) & “variable” (V) regions (great amt variation from 1 B cell to another) • includes tail (heavy chain only)that extends thru membrane & into cytoplasm and all disulfide bridges
B Cell Activation • starts when agn binds to a B cell agn receptor • ends with B cell secreting soluble form of its agn receptor = antibody (aby) or immunoglobulin (Ig) • abys have same “Y” shaped organization as the B cell agn receptor
T Cell Recognition of agn • agn receptors made of 2 chains: α chain & a β chain linked by disulfide bridges • both chains pass thru plasma membrane & into cytoplasm • both have C regions & V regions