Lecture 22 - Ch. 43

21
Ch. 43 The Body’s Defenses

Transcript of Lecture 22 - Ch. 43

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Ch. 43

The Body’s Defenses

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The skin and mucous membranes provide

first-line barriers to infection

• The first line of nonspecific defense consists of the intact skin and mucous membranes, mucus, ciliated cells lining the upper respiratory system, lysozyme, and gastric juices.

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Phagocytic cells, inflammation, and antimicrobial

proteins function early in infection • The second line of nonspecific defense depends primarily upon

neutrophils and macrophages, phagocytic white cells in the blood and tissues.

• Natural killer cells mediate lysis of virus-infected cells and tumor cells.

• Tissue damage triggers a local inflammatory response. • Injured cells release histamine, a chemical signal that causes

dilation and increased permeability of blood vessels, allowing fluid and large numbers of phagocytic white blood cells to enter the tissues.

• The most important antimicrobial proteins in the blood and tissues are the proteins of the complement system, involved in both nonspecific and specific defense, and interferons.

• Secreted by virus-infected cells, interferons inhibit virus production in neighboring cells.

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HOW SPECIFIC IMMUNITY ARISES

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Lymphocytes provide the specificity and diversity of the immune system • A substance that elicits an immune response is called an

antigen. • The immune system recognizes specific antigens

(molecules belonging to microbes, toxins, transplanted tissue, or cancer cells) and develops an immune response that inactivates or destroys that substance.

• B lymphocytes and T lymphocytes recognize antigens via surface antigen receptors: membrane antibodies for B cells, and T-cell receptors for T cells.

• Lymphocytes circulate throughout the blood and lymph and are found in high numbers in lymphatic tissues.

• The great diversity of lymphocytes, each with receptors of one particular specificity, gives the immune system the capacity to respond to virtually any antigen.

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Antigens interact with specific lymphocytes, inducing

immune responses and immunological memory • Clonal selection occurs when an antigen

activates a lymphocyte by binding to a specific receptor.

• In the primary immune response (to the body's first exposure to an antigen), the lymphocyte proliferates and differentiates, forming a clone of short-lived, infection-fighting effector cells and a clone of long-lived memory cells, all specific for the antigen.

• Secondary immune responses to that same antigen, which involve memory cells, are faster and often protective.

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Lymphocyte development gives rise to an immune

system that distinguishes self from nonself • Lymphocytes develop from pluripotent stem cells in the bone

marrow. • B cells mature in the marrow, while T cells mature in the

thymus. Self-tolerance develops as lymphocytes bearing receptors specific for native molecules are destroyed or rendered nonresponsive.

• Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules are crucial to T cell function. Class I MHC molecules, located on all nucleated cells of the body, present antigen fragments to cytotoxic T cells.

• Class II MHC molecules, found mainly on macrophages and B cells, present antigen fragments to helper T cells.

• Developing T cells are exposed to class I and II MHC molecules on cells of the thymus. Only T cells bearing receptors with affinity for self-MHC molecules reach maturity.

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IMMUNE RESPONSES

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Helper T lymphocytes function in both

humoral and cell-mediated immunity • Humoral, or B cell, immunity, based on circulation of

antibodies in the blood and lymph, defends against free viruses, bacteria, and other extracellular threats.

• Cell-mediated, or T cell, immunity defends against intracellular pathogens by destroying infected cells; it also defends against transplanted tissue and cancer cells.

• A CD4-bearing helper T cell is activated when its receptor binds specifically to a class II MHC-antigen complex on the surface of an antigen-presenting cell (APC).

• The T cell then secretes interleukin-2 and other cytokines, which help activate B cells and cytotoxic T cells.

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In the cell-mediated response, cytotoxic T

cells counter intracellular pathogens

• Most cytotoxic T cells are activated by cytokines and specific binding to class I MHC-antigen complexes on a target (infected, transplanted, or cancerous) cell.

• The T cell then secretes perforins, which form pores in the target cell membrane, causing the cell to lyse.

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In the humoral response, B cells make

antibodies against extracellular pathogens • B cells are activated by cytokines and specific binding of their

membrane antibodies to extracellular antigens. • Most of these antigens are proteins or large polysaccharides, each

with multiple epitopes. • Antibodies, also called immunoglobulin (Ig) molecules, are serum

proteins.• The variable regions of an Ig molecule bind to a specific epitope; the

constant regions determine the antibody's class. • The five major immunoglobulin classes are IgG, IgM, IgA, IgD, and

IgE. • An antibody does not destroy an antigen directly but neutralizes it or

targets it for elimination by opsonization, agglutination, precipitation, or complement fixation.

• Opsonization, agglutination, and precipitation enhance phagocytosis of the antigen-antibody complex; complement fixation leads to lysis of a complement protein-bound bacterium or virus.

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Invertebrates have a rudimentary immune system

• Invertebrates have the ability to distinguish between self and nonself.

• In many invertebrates, amoeboid cells called coelomocytes can identify and destroy foreign substances.

• Experiments with earthworms show that their defense systems form memory against tissue grafts.

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• Immune Responses video

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IMMUNITY IN HEALTH AND DISEASE

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Immunity can be achieved naturally or artificially

• Active immunity occurs when the immune system responds to a foreign antigen acquired either by natural infection or artificially, as by immunization.

• In immunization, a nonpathogenic form of a microbe or part of a microbe generates an immune response to and immunological memory for that microbe.

• Passive immunity occurs when antibodies are transferred from one individual to another.

• t occurs naturally, when IgG passes from mother to fetus or when IgA passes from mother to infant in breast milk, or artificially, when antibodies from an animal immune to a disease are injected into another animal, conferring short-term protection.

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The immune system's capacity to distinguish self from nonself limits blood transfusion and

tissue transplantation • Certain antigens on red blood cells determine whether a person has

type A, B, AB, or O blood. Antibodies to nonself blood types (generally IgM) already exist in the body.

• If incompatible blood is transfused, the transfused cells are killed by antibody- and complement-mediated lysis.

• The Rh factor, another red blood cell antigen, creates difficulties when an Rh-negative mother carries successive Rh-positive fetuses.

• During delivery of the first Rh-positive infant, the mother's immune system develops anti-Rh IgG, which can cross the placenta and may attack the red blood cells of a subsequent Rh-positive fetus.

• The chances of success in organ or tissue transplantation are improved if the donor and recipient MHC tissue types are well matched.

• In addition, immunosuppressive drugs help prevent rejection. In bone marrow transplantation, there is danger of a graft versus host reaction.

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Abnormal immune function can lead to disease

• In allergies such as hay fever, an allergen, such as pollen, triggers histamine release from mast cells, inducing vascular changes and typical symptoms.

• Sometimes the immune system loses tolerance for self, leading to autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and insulin-dependent diabetes.

• Some people are naturally deficient in humoral or cell-mediated immune defenses, or both.

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AIDS is an immunodeficiency disease caused by a virus

• Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is caused by the direct and indirect destruction of CD4-bearing T cells by HIV, the human immunodeficiency virus, over a period of years.

• AIDS, the final stage of this process, is marked by low helper T cell levels and opportunistic diseases characteristic of a deficient cell-mediated immune response.

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• HIV Reproductive Cycle video

• What Causes Infections in AIDS Patients? video

• Why Do AIDS Rates Differ Across the U.S.? video

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