1 / 11

Nonspecific Defenses of the Host

Nonspecific Defenses of the Host. The Immune System. The First Line of Defense. Surface Barriers. Epidermis (Skin). Intact surface is rarely penetrated by microbes Stratum Corneum is made of dead keratinized cells that form an armor plating

ianna
Download Presentation

Nonspecific Defenses of the Host

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. Nonspecific Defenses of the Host

  2. The Immune System

  3. The First Line of Defense Surface Barriers

  4. Epidermis (Skin) • Intact surface is rarely penetrated by microbes • Stratum Corneum is made of dead keratinized cells that form an armor plating • Dead karatinized cells are constantly sloughing off

  5. Epidermis • Dry: Most areas of the skin are too dry for microbial growth. • Acidic: (pH 5): The sebaceous glands produces sebum, an unsaturated fatty acid. • Temperature: slightly cooler than 37 degrees • Resident microflora: The natural flora out competes pathogenic organisms.

  6. Mucous Membranes • Mucous membranes are surfaces areas lining the Respiratory, G.I., and urogenital tracts. • These membranes are considered to be outside the body. • Mucous membranes are involved in either secretion or absorption and thus cannot be covered with an armor of dead cells. • Membranes must be bathed in fluids (warm, wet environments that would readily colonize bacteria if they were not protected by a number of defenders.

  7. Defense of the Mucous Membrane • Goblet cells produce mucus, a thick sticky substance composed of polysaccharide and protein. • Mucus contains carbohydrate structures similar to the ones on mucosal cells surfaces • Mucus traps bacteria before they can reach membrane. • Muco-ciliary escalator pushes microbes and debris outside the respiratory system • M-cells funnel bacteria into waiting phagocyts

  8. Eyes (lacrimal apparatus • Washing action of tears along with the blinking action of the eyelid mechanically removes bacteria and debris • Lysozyme attacks peptidoglycan layer of bacteria

  9. Stomach • Low pH and digestive enzymes kill microbes and endospores that enter the GI tract.

  10. Reflexes • Types: Coughing sneezing, blinking, vomiting • Function: Expel microbes and toxins

  11. Earwax Antibacterial and insect repellent

More Related