Title: Non-specific Host Defenses
1Non-specific Host Defenses
- Physical barriers
- Cellular defense
- Processes
- Phagocytosis
- Inflammation
- Chemical defenses
2Physical barriers
Skin Layered tissue, puncture resistant. High in
keratin, water repellant. Secretions maintain
low pH. Outer layers slough off, reducing
microbial load. Self-repairing.
http//www.ucihs.uci.edu/derm/images/skin.gif
3Mucous membranes
Tissues lining openings to the outside Mouth,
genito-urinary tract, etc (anything pink).
Easier for microbes to invade, but coated with
mucus which traps microbes this combined with
some type of movement removes microbes from
area Flushing action tears, urine, saliva,
other secretions. Action of cilia propel mucus
microbes toward GI tract or to where they can be
coughed out.
http//www.ich.ucl.ac.uk/factsheets/test_procedure
_operations/tonsils_adenoids_removed/mouth.gif
4Cellular defenses- Blood
- 60 Plasma
- Water and salts (electrolytes)
- Proteins albumin, immunoglobulins, fibrinogen,
complement, etc.
- 40 Formed Elements (cells mostly)
- RBCs (erythrocytes, red cells) carry oxygen
- WBCs (leukocytes, white cells) fight infection
- Platelets involved in clotting, release
prostaglandins.
http//dragondebris.com/burning_man_2000/bigs/bloo
d.jpg
5White blood cells
Lymphocytes 20-50 of total, T and B cells, deal
with specific immunity Monocytes 2-8 of
total, grow up to become macrophages, big
eaters
Granulocytes Neutrophils 50-70, numerous
short-lived phagocytes Eosinophils 1-5, stain
red, attack parasites Basophils 0.1, stain
blue, release histamine Granulocytes named
according to microscopic appearance, presence of
granules, type of stain, etc.
http//www.clinical-blood-testing.com/images/white
20blood20cells.jpg
6Blood clotting
- Complicated pathway featuring inactive proteins
becoming activated. - Prothrombin to thrombin Fibrinogen to fibrin
- Platelets respond to physical roughness, release
factors that lead to clotting. - Response to endotoxin results in blood clotting
within the vessels intravascular coagulation. - Definition Serum is plasma without the clotting
factors. Allow blood to clot, result is serum.
Clotting factors are used up, gone.
7More about Macrophages
- Large and mean, clean up debris as well as
microbes. - Important link between non-specific immunity and
specific immunity - Wandering vs. fixed macrophages
- Wandering macrophages patrol bloodstream,
stepping into tissues when called - Fixed reside in specific organs, get fancy names
like Kupffer cells, histiocytes, osteoclasts,
neuroglia, depending on home.
8Phagocytosis-1
- What and who
- Cell-eating, a process by which cells engulf and
destroy microbial invaders, debris, foreign
material. - Neutrophils (PMNs) and macrophages are the major
phagocytic cells in the body. - Steps in the Process
- Chemotaxis phagocytes respond to (move toward)
various chemicals (cytokines) released by host
cells and by microbes. - Attachment cell binds to material/microbe.
9Visual of phagocytosis
A macrophage of a mouse stretching its arms to
engulf two particles, possibly pathogens
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrophage
10Phagocytosis-2
- Process continued
- Engulfment target brought into cell by
endocytosis. Now in cytoplasm in a vesicle. - Digestion vesicle (phagosome) containing microbe
fuses with lysosome. Microbe is subjected to - Hydrolytic enzymes, hydrogen peroxide, bleach,
superoxide - Residual, undigested material is tossed out.
11Cartoon of phagocytosis
Exocytosis
Phagosome-lysosome fusion
lysosomes
phagosome
endocytosis
http//content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/thum
b/b/bc/400px-Phagocytosis.png
12For every step in the process, some microbe has
found a way to interfere and save itself!!
- Anti-phagocytic coatings
- Capsules, M-protein arent grabbed and engulfed
- Prevent phagosome-lysosome fusion
- Prevention of destruction in phago-lysosome
- Hide from phagocytes by entering
non-professional phagocytes. - Kill phagocytic cells
- leukocidins
medlib.med.utah.edu/.../ AIDS/AIDS030.html
13Extracellular killing
- Eosinophils
- Attach to parasites (protozoa, worms) larger than
they are, release enzymes that attack pest. - Natural killer cells
- Non-specific lymphocytes (different from T and B
cells) which attack virus-infected cells and kill
them. - Death of virus-infected host cells is a major way
of fighting a viral infection T cells do the
same. - Also attack tumor cells
14The Lymph system
- Parallel circulatory system
- Series of vessels and nodes
- Drains off excess body fluids from
- tissues, returns fluids to cardiovascular system
- Lymph nodes filter out microbes
- Nodes filled with macrophages and lymphocytes
- Fluid flows thru slowly, maximizes contact
- Other lymphoid tissue
- Spleen, thymus, MALT/GALT, tonsils
http//www.acm.uiuc.edu/sigbio/project/updated-lym
phatic/lymph_node.gif
15Tonsil
16Inflammation
- Rubor, calor, tumor, dolor redness, local heat,
swelling, and pain. (and loss of function). - Largely all explained by increased blood flow and
vessel permeability in area of injury. - Inflammation is a host response to tissue injury!
- Injury doesnt have to be accompanied by
microbes, but often is in real life. - Process limits spread of microbes, brings
anti-microbial factors to the area.
17Inflammation-2
- Tissue damage activates mast cells
- Mast cells release histamine, a substance that
- Contracts smooth muscle
- Dilates capillaries and venules
- Fluid leaks into tissue, WBC line up and pass
through vessel was into tissue (diapedesis) - WBCs neutrophils THEN macrophages, move into
area, carry out phagocytosis - Fibrinogen activates to fibrin, produces
inflammatory barrier. Walls off microbes. - Coagulase increases streptokinase breaks down
18Inflammation-3
- Pus accumulation of fluid, live and dead cells.
- A pyogen promotes pus formation
- Usually, pus released to outside or absorbed.
- Repair fibroblast multiply to create a patch
- With minor damage, normal cells repair wound.
- Too much damage, fibroblasts and fibers make up
granulation tissue, leave scar. - A granuloma is a pocket of scar tissue
- Chronic inflammation
- Normal tissue gradually replaced by
non-functional scar tissue can eventually lead
to organ failure.
19Inflammation-4
- The signs and symptoms of inflammation are mostly
explained by the vasodilation and increased
permeability of blood vessels - Increased redness more blood in area.
- Edema leakage and accumulation of fluid.
- Increased heat more blood flow from warm
interior. - Pain pressure from swelling, also chemical
mediators of pain like prostaglandins, bradykinin - Inflammation is separate from Fever
20Fever
- Pyrogen a substance that causes fever
- Exogenous pyrogen external substance that
activates the bodys temperature setting systems - LPS
- Endogenous pyrogen Interleukin-1, substance
produced by macrophages - Il-1 travels to hypothalamus, changes body
thermostat - Chills result from bodys attempt to warm itself
to reach the new correct temperature.
21Fever-2
- Fever is good for you
- Raises temperature above whats optimal for
pathogen, allows host defense more time. - May inactivate toxins or enzymes.
- Speeds up host metabolic rate, faster response.
- Makes patient feel ill so youll stay home and
rest! - Leukocyte-endogenous mediator (LEM)
- Causes fever and hides iron.
- Battle over Fe hemolysins and siderophores vs.
transferrin and LEM you hide it, germs try to
find it. - Too high a fever is dangerous, though.
22Chemical defenses
- Secretions
- Fatty acids in sebum on skin, low pH and are
toxic - Lysozyme in tears, saliva, other fluids
- Blood and fluid proteins
- Complement collection of gt20 blood proteins that
work in cascade fashion. - Stimulate inflammation, act as opsonins, lyse
cells work together with antibodies. - Interferon several types, warn neighboring cells
of local viral infection, induce anti-viral
state. - Function also as interleukins
23Microbial Antagonism
- Normal Microbiota aids host defenses by
- Competing w/ pathogens for nutrients
- Occupying host surfaces
- Killing invaders with bacteriocins
- Changing conditions, e.g. pH
- Stimulating host defenses
- Leaking into body, keeping defenses on alert
- Producing vitamins benefiting overall host health