Post on 01-Apr-2015
IMMUNE SYSTEM BASICS
HOW A VIRUS ATTACKS THE BODY.HTTP://WWW.YOUTUBE.COM/WATCH?V=RPJ0EMEGSHQ&FEATURE=RELATED
PATHOGENS Any biological agent that causes illness
and/or disease to its host. Also known as a germs, simple as that!
Different types of pathogens include the following:
HTTP://WWW.YOUTUBE.COM/WATCH?V=NON4MKYQPYA&LIST=PL713E26869E18998B&INDEX=3
Pathogens will trigger the immune system to respond.
3 MAIN DEFENSES
External Barriers
Non-specific Internal (aka INNATE)
Fever & Inflammatory response
Immune Response
EXTERNAL DEFENSE
Skin produces Sweat which contains
lysozymes Oil – traps bacteria / fungi
Mucus membranes of digestive and respiratory tract produceMucus to trap foreign particlesCilia sweep the mucus to be
cleared from body
NON-SPECIFIC INTERNAL DEFENSE
WHITE blood cellsMonocytes and Neutrophils
are able to cross capillary walls
use PHAGOCYTOSIS to engulf foreign invaders
Natural Killer cellsRespond to chemical message from Neutrophils; sensing molecular changes in cells causes the release of cytotoxic proteins into “foreign cell”.
NON-SPECIFIC INTERNAL DEFENSE
Inflammatory ResponseHistamines make capillary walls
“leaky”RBC, WBC, platelets and fluid cross
capillary walls swelling, redness and warmth in
the injured area PUS formation – tissue debris,
microbes and WBC (dead and alive)
NON-SPECIFIC INTERNAL DEFENSE
FEVER – triggered if pathogen is in bloodstream or infection is now systemic rather than localized.
102 – 1030 F is beneficial high temp in fighting viral infections and triggers release of interferon.
Interferon literally interferes with viral replication.
SPECIFIC INTERNAL RESPONSE
aka IMMUNE RESPONSE Use Lymphocytes
B-Cells = humoral T-Cells = cell mediated
Thymus, lymph nodes and spleen house these cells until called into action by interleukins and cytokines.
Leukocytes (White Blood Cells)
lymphocytes
T cells B CellsNK
Cells
WHITE BLOOD CELLS
B CELLS B Plasma Cells- when the B
cell produces the antibody for a specific antigen, it begins to clone itself into B plasma cells, that produce more of that particular binding antibody.
These cells release immunoglobulin, or antibodies.
B plasma cells have a 5 to 7 day life-span; all its protein synthesis energy is going into the production of Antibodies, not self preservation.
B Memory Cells- These are the same as B plasma cells, except they remain inactive until the secondary immune response
Secondary immune response is considered anytime the body encounters a pathogen after the first time. Quicker response time.
Primary response is the first time the body encounters a specific pathogen, Lag period before B cells respond.
T CELLS
T cells
Helper T cell (Th)
Memory T cell
Helper T cell
Killer T cell
Suppressor T cell
Killer T cell (Tk)
Suppressor T cells - in charge of slowing and stopping the immune response after the foreign substance is destroyed.
Helper T cells - secrete lymphokines that direct B cells into producing antibodies and also direct the Killer T cells as to which cell they get to eliminate.
Killer T cells - They find specifically coded infected cells, and then destroy them with cytotoxins. They may be directed by Helper T cells
Memory T cells - derived from Helper T cells, have the same properties as their parent cell, and circulates until the body encounters the pathogen its parent cells were designer for.
ANTIBODIES & ANTIGENS
Antigens= a fragment of a protein or peptide from the pathogen, taken to the surface of the infected cell and bound in an MHC (major histocompatibility complex) molecule.
The class 1 MHC complex molecule and the foreign peptide form the antigen, which can be read by the receptors on Killer T cells.
CellClass 1 MHC molecule
Antigen
Pathogen
Antibodies are produced by B cells, when stimulated by lymphokines from helper T cells. The antibody attaches to the antigen, completing the signal, coding the infected cells for destruction.
Antibodies are constructed of DNA fragments, making them so unique and almost innumerable.
ANTIBODIES – PROTEINS CREATED BY B-CELLS THAT “LOCK” DOWN FOREIGN ANTIGENS
Antibodies are shaped to match antigen binding sites called epitopes.
Epitopes are the accessible portion of the antigen – a single bacterial surface protein can have several different epitopes.
B-CELL RECEPTORS
“Y” shaped proteins extend from cell membrane.
2 heavy chains 2 light chains that
can be rearranged to match antigen.
T-CELL RECEPTORS
2 parallel protein chains a - chainb – chainThese chains form the recognition site for each different antigen.
HOW ANTIGEN RECOGNITION BY LYMPHOCYTES WORKS
MHC – major histocompatibility complex Chemical signaling proteins
Class I MHC – found on ALL cells to tell self from non-self
Class II MHC – found on macrophages & B-cells display antigens to Helper T-cells
APC – antigen presenting complex Chemical signaling displays antigen
CELL MEDIATED IMMUNITY
Helper T-Cells respond to chemical signals presented by macrophage.
Helper T-Cells stimulate cytokines and interleukin which triggers production of B-cells and cytotoxic T-cells.
Helper T cells function in both Humoral & Cell Mediated immunity.
Cell mediated =T-Cell
CELL MEDIATED IMMUNITY
T-cells attack invaders directlyPerforins released by cytoxic T-Cells
create pores in infected cell resulting in ion/water inflow cell lysis
Effective against intracellular parasites
Infected cell
PerforinsT-Cell
T-CELLS INTERACTION WITH ANTIGEN PRESENTING CELLS
In both interactions the MHC receptor allows a T-cell to bind which starts defense response.
In (a) an infected body cell alerts cytotoxic cells to destroy infected cell (short term).
In (b) a macrophage displays antigen which triggers immune response (long term).
The ability to resist a pathogen Two forms of immunity;
◦ ACTIVE – direct exposure that creates immune response.
◦ PASSIVE – induced exposure through vaccination.
WHAT IS IMMUNITY?
IMMUNITY INVOLVES PRODUCING A PRIMARY IMMUNE RESPONSE Step one – virus or bacteria infects body cell Step two – macrophage recognizes foreign
antigen of pathogen and engulfs it presenting antigen to alert SPECIFIC DEFENSE SYSTEM
Step three – macrophage activates Helper T-cells Helper T-cells set up the two prong attack of the
immune response
DEVELOPMENT OF PRIMARY IMMUNE RESPONSE - CONTINUED
Step four –Helper T-cells activate both plasma B-cells and Cytotoxic T-cells
Step five - B-cells form plasma cells which make antibodies to match foreign antigens of pathogen
DEVELOPMENT OF PRIMARY IMMUNE RESPONSE - CONTINUED
antibodies
Step five part 2- memory B-cells are created to always remember foreign antigen.
Step six – Antibodies made by plasma B-cells
find & attach to pathogens antigens
DEVELOPMENT OF PRIMARY IMMUNE RESPONSE - CONTINUED
Step seven - Antibodies mark pathogens for destruction.
Step eight - Cytotoxic T-cells locate and destroy infected cell by making a hole in the cell membrane.
DEVELOPMENT OF PRIMARY IMMUNE RESPONSE - CONTINUED
IMMUNE RESPONSE 2-PRONG ATTACK TRIGGERED WHEN HELPER T-CELLS ARE ALERTED
5b. Creation of Memory B-cell
IMMUNOLOGICAL MEMORY The reason why vaccines make sense, and we
eventually build a tolerance to certain diseases…
It’s because after every encounter with a pathogen, both the T cells and the B cells differentiate into an inactive form of their parent cell. They remain inactive until the second immune response for that specific pathogen.
Vaccination is an introduction of a dormant or dead pathogen, which allows our body to do its primary immune response without the risk of actual sickness.
HOW DO VACCINES WORK?
Vaccine contains a dead or weakened pathogen or protein from pathogen.
Most vaccines are only effective against infections before you get them.
Vaccines can wear off overtime booster shots revive immunity.
IMMUNOLOGICAL MEMORY
Heightened secondary response is due to long lived memory cells as a result of first exposure to antigen A.
IMMUNE RESPONSE 2-PRONG ATTACK TRIGGERED WHEN HELPER T-CELLS ARE ALERTED