Title: Innate vs adaptive immunity
1Innate vs adaptive immunity
- Mike Kemeny
- Professor of Immunology,
- GKT School of Medicine and Dentistry,
- Kings College, London, UK
2Textbooks
Janeway Travers Immunobiology  Abbas
Lichtman Pober Cellular Molecular
Immunology  Peakman Vergani Basic and Clinical
Immunology Various Roitt textbooks Â
3Useful web sites and reading  1. Immunologic
Diseases http//www.mic.ki.se/Diseases/c20.html
excellent resource A comprehensive list of links
to websites related to immune diseases. Â 2. The
PathoPlus Page http//pathoplus.com/newpage7.htm G
ood introductory lectures on cells of the immune
system and inflammation. Â 3. The Macrophage Home
Page http//www.path.ox.ac.uk/sg A recently
updated introduction to the cells of the
mononuclear phagocyte family. Â 4. Antigen
Presentation http//www.ultranet.com/jkimball/Bio
logyPages/A/AntigenPresentation.html A nice
introduction to antigen presentation, part of
Kimball's Biology Pages. Â 5. Clinical and basic
Immunology tutorials http//www.ozemail.com.au/da
vidful/Net_Path_Immunology/tutes.html
4What is the immune system for
- Protect against pathogens
- Eliminate damaged or malignant cells
5Role of the immune system is to protect from
Virus Influenza Polio mellitus
- Parasites
- Tapeworms
- Malaria
- Helminths
Bacteria Tubercule bacillus Staphylococci
Fungi Candida albicans
6Innate immunity
- Immediate protection
- Low specificity broad reactivity
- Important for first exposure
7The innate immune system
- Physicochemical barriers Skin, mucus, cilia
- Secreted agents Lysozyme, acidic pH, saliva,
urine - Protective organisms Commensal bacteria
- Phagocytic cells Macrophages,
Neutrophils secrete free radicals
(superoxide and cationic proteins) - Natural Killer (NK) cells
-
8Cell wall proteins
Bacterial DNA
DANGER!
Bacteria
Activated dendritic cell (DC)
9- Features of pattern recognition
- Conserved receptors and ligands
- Invokes same response in immune system
- You are born with it (innate)
10Comparison of Innate and Adaptive immune system
Innate
Adaptive
Receptors/ ligands
Diverse
Conserved
Modulated (ie memory)
Invariant
Grade of response
Immature at birth
Age
Fully mature at birth
11The innate immune system
- Ligands that bind pathogens Pattern recognition
receptors (Toll like receptors, mannose
receptors) - Secreted agents Interferon (IFN) a, b, g
- Complement activation Alternative pathway
- secretion of anaphylatoxins C3a and
C5a
12The adaptive immune system
- Later protection
- High specificity
- Important for lasting protection
13Components of the adaptive immune system
- Molecules Antibody
- Complement
- Cytokines
- Cells Lymphocytes (T B cells)
- Natural Killer cells
- Monocytes/Macrophages
- Dendritic cells
- Neutrophils Eosinophils
- Basophils/Mast cells
14Cells of the immune system
- B cells
- T cells
- NK cells
- Monocytes/macrophages
- Neutrophils
- Eosinophils
- Basophils/Mast cells
15Origin of cells involved in the immune response
Myeloid progenitor
Haemopoietic stem cell
Monocyte
Lymphocyte progenitor
Macrophage
Basophil
Neutrophil
B cell
Thymus
NK cell
Mast cell
Eosinophil
CD4 T cell
CD8 T cell
Plasma cell
16What is the immune system
- A collection of cells and molecules that protect
the body against infection, malignancy and
damaged cells
17Antigen
- A molecule that can be recognised by the immune
system - Usually foreign to the body although our own
molecules can serve as antigens - Proteins eg Grass pollen, egg albumin. bacterial
endotoxin, - Haptens eg Nickel salts which bind to proteins
18Antibody
- Specialised molecules that recognise and bind to
antigens - All antibodies are immunoglobulins
19B Lymphocytes
- 10 of blood mononuclear cells
- Make immunoglobulin (antibody)
- Each B cell only makes antibody of one
specificity - B cells that make antibody are called plasma cells
20Immunoglobulin