Properties and Overview of Immune Responses Chapter 1
- Definitions
- Immunity - (L. immunitas = protection from legal prosecution)
- historical = protection from disease (esp. infectious disease)
- Immune system = cells & molecules responsible for immunity
- Immune response = collective and coordinated response to foreign substances
- = reaction to components of microbes as well as to macromolecules that are recognized as foreign
- note - immune responses can occur against nonliving largish molecules
- Immunology = study of immune responses
- includes the cellular and molecular events that occur after an organism encounters microbes & other foreign macromolecules
- experimental science
- Innate Immunity = natural or native immunity
- Defined
- = early line of defense against microbes
- cellular and biochemical defense mechanisms that are in place before exposure
- born with
- **+** respond rapidly
- **+** recognize & react only to limited # of molecules
- **-** respond the same way (vigor/amt) even with repeated exposure
- Components
- physical & chemical barriers
- epithelia, antimicrobial substances
- cells
- phagocytic (neutrophils & macrophages)
- natural killer cells
- blood proteins
- complement system proteins
- inflammation mediators
- cytokines
- proteins that regulate & coordinate reactions
- Defense lines
- First line - goal - block entry
- epthelial barriers - skin & mucosal membranes
- natural antibiotics
- Second line - if epithelia breached
- phagocytes, NK cells, plasma proteins
- Third line - enhance adaptive immunityAdaptive immunity = Acquired immunity
- Defined
- **-** responses that are stimulated by exposure to infectious agents - delay
- **+** increase in magnitude by successive exposure - can "remember"
- specific responses are not present before exposure
- **+** can distinguish btw many many different & closely related microbe & non-microbioal molecules
- Types of adaptive immune responses
- humoral - in blood
- antibodies - proteins circulating blood
- specifically recognize and bind to infectious molecules
- proteins, carbohydrates, NAs, & lipids
- antigens - Ag - molecules that provoke the synthesis of Abs
- thereby targeting them for elimination
- or preventing them from binding targets
- principle defense against extracellular microbes & toxins
- down side only present outside cells so not "see" intracellular paracites
- active immunity
- here the individual is exposed to the infection and mounts an immune response themselves
- before exposure = naive
- after successful immune response - individual is protected from subsequent exposures = immune
- Inidiv. can also be exposed to weak microbe or parts of microbe = vaccination
- Key = make own Abs
- passive immunity
- when transfer serum containing Abs from an immune indiv. to one not exposed
- the recipient becomes immune to the particular infections without being exposed
- confers resistance rapidly but only for short time (half life of Abs)
- cell mediated = cellular immunity
- mediated by T lumphocytes / cells
- targets - intracellular microbes (ex. viruses & some bacteria)
- here inaccessible to Abs
- promotes the destruction of the infected cell
- very good against proteins
- Properties of Adaptive Immune Responses
- diversity = lymphocyte repertoire
- quite large - 107 - 109 (10 million -> gazillion) diff. molecules (epitopes, determinants)
- comes from lymphocyte ability to randomly rearrange DNA for Abs & T cell receptors
- problem - #
- 1 in 100,000 to 1 in 1,000,000 can bind Ag
- results in about 1000 - 10,000 cells that can recognize Ag
- to mount an effective defense need many, many more cells
- so when a unique lymphocyte binds an Ag (& is confirmed) it induces division
- so the cells divides & divides & divides = clonal selection
- specificity - ability to distinguish btw many diff Ags.
- immune responses are specific for distinct molecules
- even specific for diff regions of same molecule
- epitope = determinants = part(s) of molec. recognized by individual lymphocytes
- during clonal selection the gene is slightly altered
- those alterations that result in better binding receive more stimulation to divide
- those alterations that result in binding receive less stimulation so don't divide
- memory = secondary immune responses
- inital exposure = 1° immune resonse (see above)
- when exposed later to same Ag = 2° immune response & . . .
- immune response is ...
- more rapidly
- with greater intensity
- more specificity
- during first response long-living "memory" cells are created
- notice plural
- so upon re-exposure more cells ready to respond
- reason for success of vaccination
- contraction and homeostasis
- homeostasis = resting state of immune responses
- feedback loops & response
- after response to infection the immune response diminishes to homeostasis - resting
- without stimulation in response to infection many responding immune cells under go programed cell death = apoptosis
- immunological self tolerance - nonreactivity to self
- norm. an individual's immune sys does not recognize or respond to self potential Ags
- abnormalities in tolerance = autoimmune disease
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