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Immune System

Immune System. Chapter 21. Immune System. Elaborate defense system that protects the body from pathogens Also provides protection from other foreign agents including pollens, toxins and cancer cells Classified as specific and nonspecific immunity; divided into three lines of defense.

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Immune System

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  1. Immune System Chapter 21

  2. Immune System • Elaborate defense system that protects the body from pathogens • Also provides protection from other foreign agents including pollens, toxins and cancer cells • Classified as specific and nonspecific immunity; divided into three lines of defense

  3. Nonspecific Immunity • Nonspecific immunity protects the body against many types of foreign agents • Body does not recognize specific foreign agents • First line of defense • Mechanical and chemical barriers, reflexes • Second line of defense • Phagocytosis, inflammation, fever, protective proteins, natural killer cells

  4. First Line of Defense • Mechanical barriers • Intact skin and mucous membranes • Chemical barriers • Tears, saliva and perspiration help wash away microorganisms; tears secrete lysozyme • Stomach acid & digestive enzymes create a hostile environment • Mucus creates a sticky environment; traps particles in the respiratory tract which are swept away by cilia

  5. First Line of Defense • Reflexes • Sneezing and coughing help remove pathogens from the respiratory tract • Vomiting and diarrhea help remove pathogens from the digestive tract

  6. Second Line of Defense • Phagocytosis • Leukocytes ingest and destroy pathogens and other foreign substances • Can be motile or fixed • Motile cells respond to injury; sense chemical signals sent out by injured cells (chemotaxis) • Fixed cells- macrophages (“big eater”); remain in certain organs and filter blood as it passes through (liver, spleen, lungs)

  7. Second Line of Defense • Inflammation • Response the body makes when confronted by an irritant (pathogens, friction, excessive heat or cold, radiation, injury, chemicals) • If the irritant is a pathogen, the inflammation is called an infection • Characterized by redness, heat, swelling and pain (rubor, calor, tumor, dolor)

  8. Inflammation • When tissues are injured, the cells release histamine (and other substances) • Cause blood vessels near the site to dilate and bring more blood to the area • Histamine causes blood vessel walls to leak fluid into the tissue space • Fluid and irritating chemicals accumulate at the injured site

  9. Inflammation • Increased blood flow carries more phagocytes to injured site • Phagocytes may be killed in the process of destroying foreign particles; the accumulation of dead leukocytes, pathogens, injured cells and tissue fluid is called pus • Clotting factors are also secreted- helps to prevent the spread of infection

  10. Second Line of Defense • Fever • Also known as pyrexia (fever reducers are known as antipyretics) • Pyrogens are released by phagocytes as they are doing their job • Pyrogens stimulate the hypothalamus to increase the body temperature • Elevated temperature stimulates phagocytosis and diminishes reproduction of some pathogens

  11. Second Line of Defense • Protective Proteins • Interferons • Secreted by cells when those cells are infected with a virus; diffuse to surrounding cells to prevent viral replication • Complement proteins • Circulate in the blood in an inactive state; when activated against a bacterium, the proteins attack the cell and punch holes in the cell membrane; the bacterium bursts and dies

  12. Second Line of Defense • Natural Killer (NK) Cells • Specialized lymphocyte that acts nonspecifically to kill a variety of cells • Effective against many microbes and certain cancer cells • Work with the other lines of defense to increase their protective properties

  13. Natural killer cells attacking an infected cell (Image: Jerry G Johnson from The World of Biology)

  14. Specific Immunity • Third Line of Defense • Provides protection against one specific substance and no other • Most important cells in this type of immunity: • B lymphocytes • T lymphocytes • Macrophages

  15. Antigens • Antigen is a substance that stimulates the formation of antibodies • Generally large molecules, usually proteins; found on the surface of pathogens, RBCs, pollens, food, toxins & cancer cells • Antigenic substances are attacked by lymphocytes

  16. Self vs. Non-Self • Before birth, the cells of the body learn to recognize what cells are “you” (self) and what cells are “not you” (non-self- foreign agent) • Body perceives non-self cells as antigenic and tries to get rid of them (the basis of autoimmune diseases)

  17. Lymphocytes • T lymphocytes • Originate from the thymus gland • B lymphocytes • Originate from bone marrow • Both attack antigens, but through different mechanisms

  18. Lymphocytes • T lymphocytes • Attack antigens directly, through cell to cell contact • This mechanism is referred to as cell-mediated immunity

  19. Lymphocytes • B lymphocytes • Interact with the antigen indirectly, through the secretion of antibodies • Process is called antibody-mediated immunity (or, humoral immunity) • Activated B cells produce antibodies which react against specific antigens (individual cells can produce millions of antibodies)

  20. Helper T cells • Both T and B lymphocytes depend on helper T cell activity • HIV attacks these helper T cells, which severely affects the immune system • Helper T cells are also called CD4+ T cells (named for a protein on their surface); a CD4 count is a marker for the function of the immune system; as AIDS progresses, the CD4 count decreases

  21. Antibodies • Antibodies secreted by the B cells are called immunoglobulins; found primarily in the plasma • Most abundant in the body are • Immunoglobulin G (IgG) • Immunoglobulin A (IgA) • Immunoglobulin M (IgM)

  22. Antibodies • Antibodies destroy antigens • Antibodies either destroy antigens directly by attacking the membrane, or indirectly by activating complement proteins • Direct attacks are called antigen-antibody reaction • Indirect attacks promote chemotaxis, agglutination (clumping), lysis and phagocytosis

  23. Primary & Secondary Response • Primary Response • When exposed to an antigen, B cells produce plasma cells and memory cells • Plasma cells secrete antibodies • Slow development of response and low blood levels of antibodies

  24. Primary & Secondary Response • Secondary Response • If the same antigen is presented again, the body responds much faster and produces a large number of antibodies • Stimulated by memory cells (live for a long time in the plasma) • Provides immunity from certain diseases (if you had measles as a child, for example, you cannot get it again); the levels of antibodies in the blood is called an antibody titer

  25. Types of Immunity • Genetic Immunity • Inherited immunity to certain diseases • Based on genetic makeup • Also called innate, inborn or species immunity • Means you cannot get certain diseases that affect other species (canine heartworm, for example)

  26. Acquired Immunity • Naturally Acquired Immunity • Active Immunity (achieve immunity by getting the disease, as in the secondary response) • Generally long-lasting • Passive immunity (acquired before birth from mother; also passed through breastmilk) • Provides only about six months protection

  27. Acquired Immunity • Artificially Acquired Immunity • Vaccine (an antigen-bearing substance injected into a person to stimulate antibody production) • Vaccines containing a pathogen that is first weakened or killed is called attenuated (still cause antibody production, but too weak to cause disease) • Vaccines can also be made from toxins secreted by the pathogen (still produces immunity); called toxoids

  28. Acquired Immunity • Artificially Acquired Immunity • Immune globulin (obtained from a donor; contain antibodies to respond to a specific antigen) • Provide immediate protection, but not as long-lasting • Available for diseases like rubella (German measles, hepatitis A and B, rabies and tetanus)

  29. Acquired Immunity • Artificially Acquired Immunity • Antitoxins (contain antibodies that neutralize the toxins secreted by the antigens; do not affect the actual pathogen) • Antitoxins include tetanus antitoxin, diptheria and botulism • Antivenoms contain antibodies that protect from the effect of venom from poisonous snakes

  30. Other Immunologic Responses

  31. Allergic Reactions • Delayed reaction allergy • Usually about 48 hours to occur • Usually results from repeated exposure, resulting in a contact dermatitis • Include reactions to things like cleaning chemicals, poison ivy, soaps, cosmetics, latex, etc…

  32. Allergic Reactions • Immediate hypersensitivity reaction • Occurs immediately, involves IgE • Allergen (antigen) activates a B cell; forms clones- plasma cell secretes antibodies; plasma cell secretes large amounts of IgE; IgE binds to mast cells in body tissues; mast cells release large amounts of histamine, leukotrienes and other substances that cause systemic effects…

  33. Allergic Reactions • Immediate hypersensitivity reaction • Anaphylaxis is the most severe form of hypersensitivity reaction; results in massive vasodilation, hypotension and bronchoconstriction; anaphylactic shock may result • Certain antibiotics (especially penicillin) cause anaphylaxis, also food (peanuts) and insect stings (bee venom)

  34. Examples of allergic reactions to medications

  35. Anaphylaxis

  36. Autoimmune Disease • Occurs when a person’s own T cells attack their body • Diseases that result from these attacks are called autoimmune diseases • Include systemic lupus erythematosis (SLE), rheumatic fever, rheumatoid arthritis

  37. Hand deformity from rheumatoid arthritis Hallmark “butterfly rash” of SLE

  38. Organ Rejection • When organs are transplanted, the patients body perceives the tissue as foreign, so it attacks the tissue with its defenses • If the immune attack is successful, the organ is said to be rejected • Organs are selected that are immunologically similar and drugs are given to suppress the patient’s immune system

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