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The Immune system. The Immune system is the body’s defense system. Against: Bacteria Viruses Protists Other living invaders Toxins Foreign debris Cancerous cells The immune system is complex Defends against threats known and unknown. Elements of the Immune system.
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The Immune system is the body’s defense system • Against: • Bacteria • Viruses • Protists • Other living invaders • Toxins • Foreign debris • Cancerous cells • The immune system is complex • Defends against threats known and unknown
Elements of the Immune system • Many lines of defense, for many kinds of threats • Skin • Blood • Thymus • Spleen • Lymphatic system • Mucous membranes • Bone marrow
Innate vs. Adaptive immunity Innate Immunity Adaptive Immunity Mechanisms which fight specific invaders For unknown threats Responsive Requires time to build defense (days) Cannot anticipate threats Remembers previous threats • Non-specific • Defends against known invaders • Skin, lysozyme • Pre-existing • Cannot adapt to changing threats
Humoral vs. Cell-mediated Immunity Cell- Mediated Immunity Humoral immunity Proteins in blood (“humors”) Innate- complement system, clotting factors, cytokines, etc. Adaptive: Antibodies • Live cells kill invaders • Innate: Phagocytic cells (e.g. macrophages, neutrophils) • Adaptive: B lymphocytes and T lymphocytes create specific responses to unique invaders
Blood is a mixture of cells and plasma Human Blood after centrifugation • ~55% Plasma • ~45% Red blood cells • <1% White blood cells and platelets (“buffy coat”)
Blood plasma • Water • Nutrients • Solutes- Na+, Cl-, wastes, CO2, etc. • Contains humoral immune elements • Some innate immunity
All blood cells are part of the hematopoetic stem cell lineage
Hematopoetic stem cells differentiate into all blood cells • Pluripotent- able to become any one of many cell types • Includes T cells, B cells, macrophages, etc.
Red blood cells carry oxygen and CO2 • Lose nucleus in development • Short-lived, no repair • Packed solid with hemoglobin • Membranes designed to maximize surface area • Facilitate gas transfer
Hemoglobin • The oxygen-carrying protein • Heterotetrameric protein • 2 alpha subunits, 2 beta • Each subunit holds a Heme group • Each heme holds an Fe++ ion • Each Fe++ can bind an O2
Hemoglobin binding curve • In areas of High O2 (e.g., lungs)- binds O2 very well (picks up O2) • In areas of Low O2 (e.g., muscles) binds O2 poorly (drops off O2) • Myoglobin binds O2 in muscle & organ tissues
Platelets assist with blood clotting • Recruit plasma protein fibrinogen to a cut • They release clotting factors • Clotting factors convert fibrinogen to fibrin • Fibrin net prevents blood loss
The liquid part of blood is called • A) water. • B) plasma. • C) serum. • D) extrastitial fluid. • E) anionic fluid.
Lysozyme- an innate enzymatic defense • Enzyme that cuts bacterial cell walls • Also cuts chitin, a constituent of fungal cell walls and arthropod exoskeleton • Found in mucous, tears, egg whites
Complement- humoral defense against non-specific invaders • A biochemical cascade • Non-specific • Signalling pathway to cause cell lysis • Also Recruitable by adaptive immune system
Which of the following, produced by virus-infected cells, diffuses to neighboring cells to help them fight a viral infection? • A) lysozyme • B) interferon • C) histamine • D) antigen • E) interleukin-2
Keeping the body safe comes at a cost • Inflammation implicated in heart disease, etc. • Gum inflammation linked to heart attacks
The lymphatic system collects lymph and houses white blood cells in nodes
Adaptive Immunity contains humoral and cell-mediated components
Antibodies- the Key component of humoral adaptive immunity • Two light chains, two heavy chains • Each contains a variable region and a constant region
Clonal selection musters B-cell defense forces against specific antigens
Immune cells are the only cells with different DNA • VDJ recombination of light and heavy chains generate antibody diversity • Change is permanent • A form of Russian Roulette for the cell • Successful recombination creates a binding antibody- cell survives • Unsuccessful- cell is destroyed • Finding a good cell takes time
Breast milk contains maternal antibodies • Infants have no acquired immunity • Mother’s acquired immunity is transferred to the baby through nursing • Passive immunity • Is not retained by the baby
Vaccination gives the body active immunity • An antigen sample is given to a person • Person’s immune system mounts a response to the antigen • Antigen can be deactivated/destroyed virus particles, etc. • No waiting time for body to develop 2o immune response
Antibodies can be used as therapy • Some growth factors are overactive in certain cancers • Antibody binds to growth factors, or their receptors
Polyclonal Antibodies • From multiple B cells • Bind to different epitopes of an antigen
Monoclonal antibodies • Obtained from a single B cell • Bind to a single epitope • A single B cell is fused to a myeloma cell • Myeloma cells are immortal
Mouse antibodies can be humanized • Constant regions of mouse antibody are gradually replaced with human sequences
Fluorescent antibodies can be used in scientific experiments • Fluorescent molecules can be linked to antibodies • Antibodies show us where proteins exist in vivo
In an ELISA, Horseradish Peroxidase is linked to a 2o antibody
Indirect ELISATo detect the presence of an antibody Primary Antibody Secondary Antibody Wash Block Wash Substrate
The transfer of antibodies from breast milk to an infant is an example of __________ immunity. • A) nonspecific • B) passive • C) humoral • D) active • E) cell-mediated
T cells are the primary cell-mediated adaptive immune response
Major HistocompatibilityComplex (MHC or HLA) • MHCI Found on all cells, recognized by TC cells • MHCII Found on B cells and Macrophages recognized by TH cells
When presented with antigen, Helper T cells recruit other immune cells
The basic function of T cells is to identify and destroy invaders in our • A) blood or lymph. • B) interstitial fluid. • C) cells. • D) immune system. • E) brain.