1 / 28

Chapter 24- The Immune System

Chapter 24- The Immune System. Active immunity Allergen Allergies Anaphylactic shock Antibody Antigen Antigen receptors Antigen-binding site Antigenic determinants Antigen-presenting cells Antihistamine Autoimmune diseases B cells Cell-mediated immunity Clonal selection

tolla
Download Presentation

Chapter 24- The Immune System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 24- The Immune System • Active immunity • Allergen • Allergies • Anaphylactic shock • Antibody • Antigen • Antigen receptors • Antigen-binding site • Antigenic determinants • Antigen-presenting cells • Antihistamine • Autoimmune diseases • B cells • Cell-mediated immunity • Clonal selection • Complement proteins • Cytotoxic T cells • Helper T cells • Histamine • Humoral immunity • Immune system • Immunity • Immunodeficiency diseases • Inflammatory response • Interferons • Lymph • Lymphatic system • Lymphocytes • Macrophages • Major histocompatibility complex • Mast cells • Memory cells • Monoclonal antibodies • Monocytes • Natural killer cells • Neutrophils • Nonself molecules • Passive immunity • Perforin • Plasma cells • Primary immune response • Secondary immune response • Self protein • T cells • Vaccination • Vaccine

  2. Immune system • Protects the body by recognizing and attacking specific kinds of pathogens and cancer cells • There are both nonspecific and specific responses against infection

  3. 1st line of defense is nonspecific Nonspecific = (can’t distinguish a certain pathogen) • Intact skin- barrier that pathogens can’t penetrate • Acids secreted by glands in skin- inhibit microbe growth • Sweat, saliva, tears- contain lysozyme- an enzyme that attacks bacterial cell walls • Digestive and respiratory systems- guarded by mucous membranes (b/c they are exposed to env) • Stomach acid- kills bacteria • Hair in nostrils- filters air • Mucous in respiratory system traps particles and cilia sweep them out

  4. Nonspecific defense cells • Neutrophils, monocytes and macrophages- engulf bact and viruses • Natural killer cells- attack cancer cells and infected body cells (especially those that harbor viruses)

  5. Proteins also attack microbes or impede reproduction • Interferons- proteins that are produced by cells that are infected by a virus to help other cells resist virus • Nonspecific, short term, can be used to treat certain cancers • Complement proteins- circulate in plasma, activated by immune system or microbes, stick to surfaces for macrophages to notice, cut holes in cells, amplify nonspecific responses

  6. Inflammatory response

  7. Inflammatory response • Major component of nonspecific defense • red, swollen, warm “inflamed” –due to increase in blood flow, fluid and cells • Damaged skin releases chem signal (histamine) • It induces blood vessels to dilate and become leaky • Blood flow to area increase, plasma moves to interstitial fluid • Other chem’s attract phagocytes • Results: disinfect area, engulf bacteria • Clotting proteins- seal off infected region • Response can be local or systemic (WBC’s increase, fever, high fever, low BP-septic shock)

  8. The Lymphatic System • Returns tissue fluid to circ system and fight infection • Consists of: vessels, lymph nodes, tonsils, adenoids, appendix, spleen, bone marrow, thymus • Involved in: nonspecific and specific resistance to infection • System is where fluid that has left circ system returns to, happens by diffusion • Infection fighting occurs in lymph nodes and other vessels which are packed with WBC’s • Sometimes they become swollen when fighting infection

  9. The Lymphatic System

  10. Specific Immunity • Immunity- resistance to specific invaders • Active- when antigens enter body (getting sick/a shot) • Passive- antibodies are passed (fetus from placenta, sometimes when travelling to other countries) • Antigen- “antibody generating”- elicits immune response • Molecules on surfaces of cells • Antibody- protein in blood plasma that attaches to particular antigen and help counter its effect *****has a good memory*****

  11. Lymphocytes • White blood cells • Originate in bone marrow • Spend most of their time in tissues and organs of lymphatic system • Produce specific immune responses • Response to antigens in 2 ways:

  12. Mature in bone marrow= B cells Humoral immunity Secretes antibodies Can be transferred passively (injecting antibodies) Mature in thymus =T cells Cell-mediated immunity Attacks infected body cells Promotes phagocytosis and stimulates B cells (so T cells are involved in both) Can be transferred passively (injecting T cells) Lymphocytes • Antigen receptors- molecules on cells surface, bind to antigen • 100mil to 100bil different kinds of B and T cells!

  13. Lymphocytes

  14. Antigens • Most are proteins or polysaccharides • Antigenic determinants- region that antibody recognizes • Site on antibody (antigen-binding site)- recognizes determinant • *complementary shape

  15. Antigens • Activate lymphocytes to multiply that are specific to the antigen- clonal selection • Effector cells produced secrete antibodies • This happens with B cells and T cells

  16. Primary Immune Response • 1st time lymphocytes are exposed to antigen and clonal selection happens • Takes a few days before lymphocytes are activated

  17. Secondary Immune Response • After 2nd exposure to same antigen • Produces very high antibody levels, lasts longer • Each antigen exposure triggers clonal selection • Cells of the clone include: • Memory cells- last for decades, remain in lymph nodes, when activated-trigger secondary response, multiply quickly • Effector cells- produce antibodies

  18. Humoral vs. Cell-mediated Immunity

  19. Humoral Immunity • In body fluids • Effector cells produced during clonal selection are called plasma cells • Plasma cells then secrete antibodies

  20. Antibodies • 2 heavy chains and 2 light chains bonded together • 2 functions: recognize and bind to antigen & neutralize the antigen • Structure allows function • Antigen-binding sites in V region • Mark antigens for elimination • Binding creates antigen-antibody complex

  21. Methods for antigen inactivation: • Neutralization- antibodies block antigens from binding with cells, phagocytes engulf complex • Agglutination- “clumping” – clumps invaders together making it easier for phagocytes to capture • Precipitation- link antigen molecules together and they precipitate out of solution as solids, easily engulfed • Activation of complement proteins by antigen-antibody complex- proteins open holes in plasma membrane, cell lyses

  22. Monoclonal antibodies • Antibody secreted by a clone of cells that’s specific for an antigen • Ex: pregnancy test- binds to hormones, STD test-binds to bacteria

  23. Cell-mediated Immunity • T cells respond to antigens on body’s own cells • Cytotoxic T cells- attack infected body cells • Helper T cells- help activate cytotoxic T’s and macrophages, and stimulate B’s to produce antibodies • Antigen-presenting cells (APC’s) – present antigens to helper T’s- triggering pathway to activate helper T’s

  24. When a T cell is activated: • Grow and divide, producing more helper T and memory T cells • Stimulate cytotoxic T’s • Bind to infected cells and form holes in membrane • Activate B cells • Cytotoxic T cells also can recognize changes in membranes of cancerous cells and destroy them

  25. Immune system depends on our molecular fingerprint • Recognizes “self” and “non-self” • What if that doesn’t work?

  26. Immune System Disorders • Autoimmune disease- immune system attacks body’s own cells • MS, lupus, insulin-dependent diabetes

  27. Immune System Disorders • Immunodeficiency disease- when a component of the system is lacking • Can be caused by physical and emotional stressors • AIDS, SCID, Hodgkins disease • HIV virus destroys helper T cells • Allergies- overreaction of the immune system • Antigens that cause allergies are called allergens

More Related