Title: Z333 Lecture
1Lecture 13 Ch. 43 Immune System
- I. Overview
- Innate Immunity
- A. components
- B. cells
- IIII. Adaptive/acquired immunity
- A. Lymphocytes
- i. B-cells
- ii. T-cells
- B. humoral vs. cell-mediated immunity
- C. Antibodies
- D. MHC molecules
- IV. Immune memory
- V. Immune System Problems
- VI. Preparation for next lecture
2Thought Question
Why do we not get sick EVERY time someone near us
sneezes?
3Overview
Irritants Pollen Dust
Pathogens Viruses Bacteria Macroparasites
For example
Virus Bacteria Macroparasites
Influenza Strep Malaria
Ebola Black Plague Sleeping Sickness
Chicken Pox Salmonella River Blindness
West Nile Virus E. Coli Elephantiasis
4Overview
A Way In?
Skin breeches (cuts, punctures, scrapes)
Mucus membranes Eyes Nose Mouth Vagina Urethra
Antigens foreign molecules specific to the
invader
5Immunity Overview
6External Barriers
Innate Immunity
- Skin
- Dry dead cells
- Constantly sloughed off
- Secretions
- Contain natural antibiotics
- Mucus physically traps microbes
Internal Barriers
Phagocytic cells detect and engulf
pathogens Mast cells cause inflammation and
alert of damaged tissues
7Innate Immunity
Leukocytes
Phagocytes - ingest foreign particles cellular
debris Macrophages consume many
cells Neutrophils die upon consumption Dendritic
cells stimulate adaptive immunity Eosinophils
helpful against parasites, destructive enzymes
Dendritic cell
Natural killer cells Attack cancerous or infected
body cells Use proteins enzymes to lyse cells
8Inflammation
Innate Immunity
- Initiated by damaged or infected cells
- Histamine release by mast cells
- Capillary flow and permeability increased
- Phagocytes drawn to area
Cytokines recruit more lymphocytes ? leads to
pus, swelling, redness, heat
9Inflammatory Symptoms
Innate Immunity
- Warm, red, painful
- Result of leaky capillaries
- Increased fluid secretions
- Removal of dead cells and waste
- Pain
- Swelling, chemical response
- Alerts injured organism
NSAIDs
Leukocytes and fluid pus
10Innate Immunity
Antimicrobial peptides first discovered in
insects (like Drosophila). Here, AMPs engineered
to glow green upper fly infected by bacteria.
Antimicrobial peptides in vertebrates the
complement family of proteins, activated by
infection and lyse infected cells Interferons
chemicals made by infected cells, trigger
anti-viral response
11Adaptive Immune System
Acquired/ adaptive immunity lymphocytes made in
bone marrow ? B cells and T cells
mature in bone marrow Antibodies secreted or
embedded in B cell membrane
mature in thymus Cozy up to infected cells, bind,
sometimes lyse
Responsible for circulating antibodies,
remembering pathogens, destroying infected cells
12B cells
Adaptive Immune System
- Humoral immunity
- B cells antibodies attack pathogens before they
enter cells - After encounter pathogen, B cells differentiate
into memory B cells and antibody-producing cells
Each B cell produces unique antibodies Over 100
million different antibodies in body ? chances
of an antigen encountering one that fits are
high
13Antibody action
Adaptive Immune System
- Defend against pathogens in blood or fluid
- Can inactivate pathogens by binding to epitopes
- Can stimulate phagocytosis
- Can neutralize toxins or block adhesion
- Can trigger complement system where blood
proteins destroy invaders
14Cell-mediated immunity
Adaptive Immune System
T cells
T cell receptors recognize pathogen pieces
presented on infected cells
- Cytotoxic T cells Insert pores in infected
cells, enzymes break down cells - Helper T cells stimulate B cytotoxic T cell
division - Some T cells develop into memory cells
15Adaptive Immune System
Self-tolerance
MHC major histocompatibility complex
All cells have MHC molecules most body cells
have MHC I (lymphocytes have MHC II in
addition) MHC molecules displayed on cell
surface each binds a specific peptide foreign
fragment then displays it on surface.
16Adaptive Immune System
Self-tolerance
T-cells (cytotoxic or helper T) bind to MHC
presented antigens Self-reactive lymphocytes
with receptors to self epitopes are eliminated
before they leave bone marrow and mature
17Adaptive Immune System
18Adaptive Immune System
Immune system must remember past victories...
- Memory cells remember specific antigens
- May survive for years
- Respond faster and larger to repeat invasion
19Memory
Adaptive Immune System
- Memory B and T cells are able to recognize
pathogens and fight off infections immediately
Then why do you keep catching a cold every year?
100 rhinoviruses Cold viruses can mutate
quickly
Vaccinations take advantage of the immune response
Body is exposed to antigens to stimulate memory
cells
20Antibiotics aid disease fight
Antibiotics
- Reduce growth and reproduction of living
pathogens (not viruses) - Give immune system time to fight infection
- Humans have misused antibiotics ?
superbugs - Overuse of antibacterial products
- Failure to complete full
course of
antibiotics - Non-medicinal use of
antibiotics
21Allergies
Immune System Problems
- Immune overreaction to harmless antigens
- Histamine triggers inflammation
- Extreme response can trigger anaphylaxis
Autoimmune Disorders
Immune system attacks healthy body cells Lupus,
Rheumatoid Arthritis, Multiple Sclerosis, Type 1
Diabetes, Celiac disease, Crohns disease
22Immune Deficiency Syndromes
Immune System Problems
Immune rejection
When tissue with non-self MHC molecules contact
immune system, response mounted Can be countered
by immunosuppressive drugs
- Severe Combined Immune Deficiency (SCID)
Few/no immune cells produced ? genetic - Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) Due
to Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) - Destroys helper T cells
23Thought Question
What can you do to fortify your immune system?
24Things To Do After Lecture 13
- Reading and Preparation
- Re-read todays lecture, highlight all vocabulary
you do not understand, and look up terms. - Ch. 43 Self-Quiz 1 7 (correct answers in back
of book) - Read chapter 43, focus on material covered in
lecture (terms, concepts, and figures!) - Skim next lecture.
- HOMEWORK (NOT COLLECTED but things to think
about for studying) - Compare and contrast T cells and B cells, the
humoral response compared to the cell-mediated
immune response. - Explain the function and parts of the human
innate immune system. - Describe the problem with each of the following
allergies, autoimmune disorders, immune
deficiency syndromes. - Why are people concerned about over-use or misuse
of antibiotics?