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Ch 16 & 17 Host Defenses

Ch 16 & 17 Host Defenses. Stephanie Lanoue. The Concept of Immunity. Learning Objectives 16-1 Differentiate innate and adaptive (acquired) immunity. Immunity. What is immunity exactly?. ability to ward off disease. What happens when we cannot ward off disease?.

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Ch 16 & 17 Host Defenses

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  1. Ch 16 & 17 Host Defenses Stephanie Lanoue

  2. The Concept of Immunity Learning Objectives 16-1 Differentiate innateand adaptive (acquired) immunity.

  3. Immunity What is immunity exactly? ability to ward off disease What happens when we cannot ward off disease? Then we have susceptibility or the lack of resistance to a disease. We can get sick.

  4. Big Picture: Immunity and levels of defense

  5. Types of Immunity • Innate immunity – _____line of defense; defenses against any pathogen; rapid, present at _______ • Nonspecific defense mechanisms that come into play immediately or within hours of an antigen’s appearance in the body • Includes physical barriers like skin, chemicals in the blood, and immune system cells that attack foreign cells in the body Adaptive or acquired immunity – _______line of defenses; more _______than innate immunity or resistance to a specific pathogen; slower to respond, creates immunological memory (the basis of vaccination)

  6. Defense Mechanisms The Immune system has __ lines of defense against foreign pathogens 1. Physical and chemical barriers (falls under Innate Immunity) 2. Nonspecific Resistance (falls under Innate Immunity) 3. Specific Resistance (falls under Acquired Immunity)

  7. Innate Defense (First Line of Defense) - Physical Factors • Cilia transports ________trapped in mucus away from the lungs • Earwax________microbes from entering the ear • Urine cleans the urethra via flow • Vaginal secretions move microorganisms out of the vaginal tract • Vomiting, diarrhea Skin – dead cells in the stratum corneum help protect against pathogens; periodic shedding of that stratum removes microbes

  8. Innate Defense (First Line of Defense), cont - Chemical factors • Lysosomes (breaks cell walls) – tears, saliva, and sweat glands(produce perspiration) • ____________microorganisms • Sebaceous glands on the skin produce oil, called _________ • Moist hairs, protective film over skin • Fatty acid, pH 3 to 5, discourages growth of microbes Gastric juice in the stomach destroys bacteria and most toxins. HCL (chief component of stomach acid) provides a very low pH 1 – 2.0 Saliva dilutes the number of microorganisms and washes teeth and mouth

  9. Innate Defense (First Line of Defense), cont - Normal Microbiota • Normal microbiota___________with pathogens via microbial antagonism • Produce substances harmful to pathogens • Alter conditions that affect pathogen survival • Probiotics: live microbial cultures administered to exert a __________effect

  10. Big Picture: Immunity

  11. Inflammation Learning Objectives 16-12 Describe second line defenses. 16-13 Describe inflammation; and the cause and effects of fever.

  12. Second Line of Defense – Nonspecific Response (Innate Immunity), cont • Tissue damage triggers _______defensive responses • _______signs and symptoms of infection: redness, pain, heat, and swelling (edema) • Inflammation function: • Destroys injurious agent or limits its effects on the body • Repairs and replaces tissue damaged by the injurious agent

  13. Second Line of Defense – Nonspecific Resistance (Innate Immunity), cont. • Acute inflammation • Cause of inflammation flares ______ but is removed rather quickly • Chronic inflammation • Cause of inflammation is difficult to remove, longer period of time

  14. Inflammation Process • Vasodilation • Vasodilation • Increase permeability of blood vessels • Edema, accumulation of fluid • Chemical such as histamine • Blood _____ • Prevent microbes from spreading • Abscess • Dead cells and body fluid

  15. Figure 16.9a-b The process of inflammation. Tissue damage Bacteria Epidermis Blood vessel Dermis Subcu- taneous tissue Nerve Vascular reactions and phagocytosis Chemicals such as histamine, kinins, prostaglandins, leukotrienes, and cytokines (represented as blue dots) are released by damaged cells. Blood clot forms. Abscess starts to form (orange area).

  16. Inflammation Process • Phagocyte migration and phagocytosis • Phagocyte sticks to ______surface of endothelium • _______between endothelial cells of the blood vessels o reach damaged area • Phagocytosis to destroy microorganism

  17. Figure 16.9b The process of inflammation. Blood vessel endothelium Monocyte Margination—phagocytes stick to endothelium. RBC Bacterium Diapedesis—phagocytes squeeze between endothelial cells. Phagocytosis of invading bacteria occurs. Neutrophil Macrophage

  18. Figure 16.9c The process of inflammation. (c) Tissue repair Scab Regenerated epidermis (parenchyma) Blood clot Regenerated dermis (stroma)

  19. Fever • Bacterial or viral infection • Body, _____temperature 39 ˚ C (102.2˚ F) • Hypothalamus is normally set at 37°C (98.6 F) • Phagocytes release cytokine, cause hypothalamus increase the temperature • Constrictingof blood vessels • Increases metabolism rate

  20. Specific Resistance (Adaptive/Acquired immunity) • Relies on antigens (specific proteins found in foreign microbes). Antigens: substances that cause the production of __________ • Usually components of invading microbes or foreign substances • Produces an immune response

  21. Major Types of Immune Cells 1. Cytotoxic T cells – these cells ________cytotoxin which triggers destruction of the pathogen’s DNA; creates holes in the pathogens plasma membrane. The holes cause the pathogen to lyse (rupture). 2. Helper T cells – these cells secrete interleukin which stimulates cell division of ___ and B cells. In other words, these cells recruit even more cells to help fight the pathogen. 3. Memory T cells – these cells remain dormant after the initial exposure to an antigen. If the same antigen presents itself again, even if its years later, the memory cells are stimulated to convert themselves into cytotoxic T cells and help fight the pathogen

  22. Figure 17.1 Differentiation of T cells and B cells. Stem cells develop in bone marrow or in fetal liver Stem cell (diverges into two cell lines) Red bone marrow of adults Thymus Differentiate to B cells in adult red bone marrow Differentiate to T cells in thymus T cell B cell Migrate to lymphoid tissue such as spleen, but especially lymph nodes

  23. Third Line of Defense, Specific Defense, cont • The immune system distinguishes __ ______ of foreign substances: • 1 group consists of antigens that are _______ circulating in the body (these include molecules, viruses and foreign cells). • 2nd group consists of ‘self’ cells that display proteins known as MHC proteins (these proteins can originate from antigens that have been engulfed and broken down or from virus-infected and tumor cells that are actively synthesizing foreign proteins

  24. Specific Defense cont. • Depending on the kind of foreign invasion, __ different immune responses occur: 1. humoral (or _______ mediated response) – involves__ cells that recognize antigens or pathogens that are circulating in the lymph or blood NOTE: “humor” is a medieval term for body fluid) 2. Cell mediated response – involves mostly __ cells and responds to any cell that displays MHC markers, including cells invaded by pathogens, tumor cells or transplanted cells

  25. Humoral Immunity cont • Produces antibodies that combat foreign molecules known as _________ • B lymphocyte (B cells) • B cells develop from ____bone marrow • B cell receptors recognize antigens and make antibodies • Specific receptor for recognition of specific antigen

  26. Antigens and Antibodies • Antibody • Globulin proteins, immunoglobulin (Ig) • Response to ________ • Recognize and bind to antigen

  27. Cellular immunity cont • Cellular immunity (_____-mediated immunity) • Produces ___lymphocytes • Recognize antigenic peptides processed by phagocytic cells • Mature in the thymus • T cell receptors (TCRs) on the T cell surface contact antigens, causing the T cells to secrete cytokines instead of antibodies • T cells response to intracellular pathogens • Best for fighting with viruses and some fungi

  28. Figure 17.20 The Dual Nature of the Adaptive Immune System.

  29. Adaptive (Acquired) Immunity • ___________ • When a person exposed to microorganism and the immune system responds • Passively • When antibody transferred from one person to another

  30. Figure 17.18 Types of adaptive (or acquired) immunity.

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