Title: The IMMUNE SYSTEM
1The IMMUNE SYSTEM
Antibody Immune System Response - Medical
Animation
2http//www.youtube.com/watch?viVMIZy-Y3f8
3Organs of the Immune System
4Fig. 43-7
Interstitial fluid
Adenoid
Tonsil
Blood capillary
Lymph nodes
Spleen
Lymphatic vessel
Tissue cells
Peyers patches (small intestine)
Appendix
Lymphatic system
Lymphatic vessels
Lymph node
Masses of defensive cells
5The Lymphatic System
- The lymphatic system aids the immune system
in removing and destroying waste, debris, dead
blood cells, pathogens, toxins, and cancer cells.
- The lymphatic system absorbs fats and fat-soluble
vitamins from the digestive system and delivers
these nutrients to the cells of the body where
they are used by the cells. - The lymphatic system also removes excess fluid,
and waste products from the interstitial spaces
between the cells.
6What about the spleen?
- It acts as a filter for blood as part of the
immune system. Old red blood cells are recycled
in the spleen, and platelets and white blood
cells are stored there.
7The immune system recognizes foreign bodies and
responds with the production of immune cells and
proteins
8- Two major kinds of defense have evolved
- innate immunity and
- acquired immunity
9- Innate immunity is present before any exposure to
pathogens and is effective from the time of birth - It involves nonspecific rapid responses to
pathogens - Innate immunity consists of external barriers
plus internal cellular and chemical defenses
10- Acquired immunity, or adaptive immunity, develops
after exposure to agents such as microbes,
toxins, or other foreign substances - It involves a very specific response to pathogens
11Fig. 43-2
Pathogens (microorganisms and viruses)
Barrier defenses Skin Mucous membranes Secretions
INNATE IMMUNITY
Recognition of traits shared by broad ranges of
pathogens, using a small set of receptors
Internal defenses Phagocytic cells Antimicrobial
proteins Inflammatory response Natural killer
cells
Rapid response
Humoral response Antibodies defend
against infection in body fluids.
ACQUIRED IMMUNITY
Recognition of traits specific to
particular pathogens, using a vast array of
receptors
Cell-mediated response Cytotoxic lymphocytes
defend against infection in body cells.
Slower response
12 The IMMUNE SYSTEM
pathogens
skin
Innate response
Acquired response
13Innate immunity of vertebrates
- Physical
- Skin low pH of skin secretions
- Mucous membranes lining digestive, respiratory,
genitourinary tracts trap and remove microbes
(with cilia in resp)
14- Chemical
- Lysozyme enzymes that attack microbial walls,
found in tears, saliva, and mucus - Gastric juice low pH
- Interferons proteins produced by viral-infected
cells to alert other cells to defend against
viral reproduction also stimulates macrophages - Complement proteins in plasma that when
activated by microbial contact may lyse cells,
trigger inflammation, or assist acquired
defensive immunity
15Complement aiding the acquired immunity system
16- Cellular
- Macrophages attack microbes in the spleen and
interstitial fluid (known as monocytes in the
blood) - Neutrophils most numerous phagocytizing cells,
phagocytize bacteria - Eosinophils attack multicellular parasites
- Dendritic cells in contact with environment,
stimulate acquired immunity system - Natural killer cells (NK cells) recognize
absence of self-markers on infected cells
17macrophage
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19Neutrophils first on the job
20Eosinophils attack multicellular parasites
21A dendritic cell
http//www.rockefeller.edu/interactive/steinman/de
ndritic_cell_v5.swf
22- Dendritic cell
- alerting the
- acquired
- immune
- system
23NK cell doing its job!
24What are toll-like receptors?
- TLRs are proteins that span membranes in
leukocytes and other cells that recognize
nonspecific microbes that breach physical
barriers such as the skin or intestinal tract. - They in turn activate the immune system.
- Originally identified in insects.
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26TLRs spanning the membrane.
Response
27Toll-like receptors
Alert! Microbes entering!
http//www.youtube.com/watch?viVMIZy-Y3f8
28- Inflammatory response
- Redness, swelling, heat
- Damaged mast cells in connective tissue release
histamine which triggers dilation and leakiness
of blood vessels, activates macrophages, promotes
blood flow to the area - Fever triggered by toxins or pyrogens released
by macrophages, stimulates production of wbcs,
speeds tissue healing - Septic shock overwhelming systemic inflammatory
response
29Fig. 43-8-3
Pathogen
Splinter
Chemical signals
Macrophage
Fluid
Mast cell
Capillary
Phagocytosis
Red blood cells
Phagocytic cell
30ACQUIRED IMMUNITY (adaptive immunity)
- Job of lymphocytes that circulate in the blood
and lymph, conc in spleen and lymph nodes - Develop from pluripotent stem cells in the bone
marrow and liver of fetuses - Become T cells after cells have migrated to the
Thymus or - B cells that develop in the Bone marrow
31Where is the thymus gland?
32How do the B and T cells work with the innate
immune system?
- Signaling molecules (cytokines) from
macrophages and dendritic cells activate them.
33What are antigens?
- Antigens proteins or polysaccharides protruding
from microbes or toxins floating around
(antibody-generating) - Epitope (antigenic determinants) portion of the
antigen recognized by immune cells
Looks like epitopes to me!
34Fig. 43-10
Antigen- binding sites
Epitopes (antigenic determinants)
Antigen-binding sites
Antigen
Antibody A
Antibody C
V
V
V
V
C
C
C
C
Antibody B
35How tricky are pathogens
- Antigenic variation changing their surface
epitopes to be unrecognizable - Some viruses go into a latency period and hide
from the immune cells - AIDS does both of these.
36There are millions of lymphocytes with their own
types of antigen receptors. How is the great
diversity of B and T cells produced?
- They are determined during early embryonic
development by genetic recombination - Receptors have constant regions and variable
regions that are specific for antigens.
37Fig. 43-9a
Antigen- binding site
Antigen- binding site
Disulfide bridge
V
V
V
V
Variable regions
C
C
Constant regions
C
C
Light chain
Transmembrane region
Plasma membrane
Heavy chains
Cytoplasm of B cell
B cell
(a) B cell receptor
38Fig. 43-9b
Antigen- binding site
Variable regions
V
V
Constant regions
C
C
Transmembrane region
Plasma membrane
? chain
? chain
Disulfide bridge
T cell
Cytoplasm of T cell
(b) T cell receptor
39What prevents B and T cells from reacting against
the bodys own molecules?
- Lymphocytes with receptors specific for bodys
own molecules are either inactivated or destroyed
by apoptosis. This is called self-tolerance.
40How to distinguish self from nonself
- MHC molecules are so named because they are
encoded by a family of genes called the Major
Histocompatibility Complex They identify cells
as belonging to you! - (histo tissue)
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42- Class I MHC molecules are found on almost all
nucleated cells of the body - Class II MHC molecules are found on immune cells
such as dendritic cells, macrophages, and B
cells. - They digest antigens and display pieces of the
antigen with their MHC complex and are called
antigen-presenting cells (APCs).
43Class I body cells
Class II- immune cells
Once the cells engulf the antigens, they display
them on their MHC complexes SELF-NONSELF.
44- Cytotoxic-T cells will bind to the MHC I
complexes (recognize infected cells) - Helper T- cells will bind to the MHC II
complexes. MHC II cells are called APCs
(Antigen Presenting Cells).
45Fig. 43-12
Antigen- presenting cell
Microbe
Infected cell
Antigen associates with MHC molecule
1
Antigen fragment
Antigen fragment
1
1
Class I MHC molecule
Class II MHC molecule
2
2
T cell receptor
T cell receptor
2
T cell recognizes combination
(a)
Cytotoxic T cell
(b)
Helper T cell
46Immunological Memory
- When antigens react with the immune cells, the
cells that are specific for that antigen are
activated to divide repeatedly and differentiate
into clones - Effector cells combative cells
- Memory cells which carry receptors for that
particular antigen - This is called CLONAL SELECTION.
47Fig. 43-14
Antigen molecules
B cells that differ in antigen specificity
Antigen receptor
This one!
Clonal selection
Antibody molecules
Clone of memory cells
Clone of plasma cells
48Monoclonal Antibody Production
Monoclonal Antibody Production
49- The first exposure to a specific antigen
represents the primary immune response - During this time, effector B cells called plasma
cells are generated, and T cells are activated to
their effector forms - In the secondary immune response, memory cells
facilitate a faster, more efficient response
50Fig. 43-15
Primary immune response to antigen A
produces antibodies to A.
Secondary immune response to antigen A produces
antibodies to A primary immune response to
antigen B produces antibodies to B.
104
103
Antibody concentration (arbitrary units)
Antibodies to A
Antibodies to B
102
101
100
0
7
14
21
28
35
42
49
56
Exposure to antigen A
Exposure to antigens A and B
Time (days)
51Remembering the antigen!
52Vaccines stimulate a mild primary response so
body can wage a secondary response to recognize
another attack.
53Acquired Immunity 2 types Humoral and
Cell-mediated
- Humoral Immune Response (antibody-mediated
response) - involves B cells and
- production of antiBodies in response to
free-floating antigens or those on surface of
foreign cells
54B cells mature into plasma cells that produce
antibodies.
55- Cell-mediated Response
- involves cytotoxic T cells that destroy target
infected cells
56The central role of Helper-Ts
- Immune cells (class II MHC) engulf antigens and
display them on their MHC. - Specific helper-Ts recognize the MHC-antigen
complex.
Binding to the helper-T
Displaying the antigen
57- A T-cell surface protein called CD4 binds the
helper-T to the MHC-II. - Activated helper-Ts release cytokines
(interleukins) - - result in more specific help-Ts and
memory cells being produced. - - stimulate both cell-mediated and
humoral responses
58The central role of Helper-Ts
Fig. 43-17
Antigen- presenting cell
Peptide antigen
Binds
Bacterium
Class II MHC molecule
CD4
TCR (T cell receptor)
Helper T cell
Cytokines
Humoral immunity (secretion of antibodies
by plasma cells)
Cell-mediated immunity (attack on infected cells)
B cell
Cytotoxic T cell
Animation The Immune Response
59Cell-mediated Response, how?
- When a nucleated regular cell becomes infected,
pieces of antigens are combined with the MHC I
and they bond to cytotoxic T cells with the help
of CD8 surface proteins. - The cytotoxic cell becomes a killer cell which
releases perforin that punches holes in the
infected cell.
60- CD 8s and CD 4s are like bungy cords.
They hold the MHC to the T or B cells
61 Cell Mediated ImmunityResponse of Cytotoxic T
cells
Cytotoxic T-cell Activity Against Target Cells
62Fig. 43-18-3
Released cytotoxic T cell
Cytotoxic T cell
Perforin
Granzymes
CD8
TCR
Dying target cell
Class I MHC molecule
Pore
Target cell
Peptide antigen
63Humoral Response, how?
- The B cell takes in a few foreign molecules and
presents antigen fragments in its class II MHC to
activated helper-T cells. - The activated B cell then proliferates into a
clone of plasma cells that will produce
antibodies and a clone of memory B cells. (Some
do not require T-cell binding or cytokines.)
64Fig. 43-19
Bacterium
Antigen-presenting cell
Peptide antigen
B cell
Class II MHC molecule
Clone of plasma cells
Secreted antibody molecules
TCR
CD4
Cytokines
Endoplasmic reticulum of plasma cell
Activated helper T cell
Helper T cell
Clone of memory B cells
2 µm
65Humoral ImmunityT-Cell Dependent Antigens
Interaction of Antigen Presenting Cells and
T-helper Cells
66The cartoon illustrates how an antibacterial
antigen-specific immune response is generated.
Microbes invade the body and are captured by
dendritic cells (DCs, the policemen). The DC
presents the antigen to the B and Th cells.
The B cells respond by bombing the microbes
with antibodies.
67Putting it all together
http//highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072495855/s
tudent_view0/chapter24/animation__the_immune_respo
nse.html
68Fig. 43-16
Humoral (antibody-mediated) immune response
Cell-mediated immune response
Key
Antigen (1st exposure)
Stimulates Gives rise to
Engulfed by
Antigen- presenting cell
B cell
Helper T cell
Cytotoxic T cell
Memory Helper T cells
Antigen (2nd exposure)
Memory Cytotoxic T cells
Active Cytotoxic T cells
Plasma cells
Memory B cells
Secreted antibodies
Defend against extracellular pathogens by binding
to antigens, thereby neutralizing pathogens or
making them better targets for phagocytes and
complement proteins.
Defend against intracellular pathogens and cancer
by binding to and lysing the infected cells or
cancer cells.
69Hematopoetic stem cells in bone marrow
differentiate
Cells present in
70Types of Antibodies
- Antibodies are proteins that are made of light
and heavy chains. - There are 5 different antibodies IgM, IgG, IgA,
IgD, and IgE. IgG is the most abundant. - IgE antibodies involved in allergies
Respond to Different antigens
71IgE Mediated Hypersensitivity
- Initial exposure, helper T cells bind to exposed
antigens on immune cells. - Cytokines stimulate the production of B cells
specific for IgE antibodies. - Second exposure, those antibodies bound to mast
cells bind to the allergic antigens which cause
the mast cells to release histamines and start an
allergic response.
IgE Mediated Hypersensitivity
72Antibodies label antigens for disposal by
- 1) Neutralization blocking the ability of a
virus or bacterium to infect a host cell by
binding to its surface
732) Opsonization antibodies (opsonins) coat
microbes for phagocytosis by macrophages
74opsonization
753) Antigen-antibody complexes on microbes can
activate the complement system and trigger a
membrane attack complex (MAC).
76Ys and Cs having a party!
77Fig. 43-21
Viral neutralization
Opsonization
Activation of complement system and pore formation
Bacterium
Complement proteins
Virus
Formation of membrane attack complex
Flow of water and ions
Macrophage
Pore
Foreign cell
78Active and Passive immunity
- Active production of antibodies from exposure
or from immunization - Passive temporary immunity by antibodies
supplied from the placenta, mothers milk, or
antibody injection
79Immune Rejection
- Blood Matching Antibodies to blood group
antigens can stimulate an immune response. - A person will make antibodies to other blood
antigens than its own.
80You make antibodies against any blood antigens
you do not have.
81- Transplanted tissue and organs are rejected due
to foreign MHC molecules. The use of closely
related donors and immune suppression drugs help
to minimize rejection.
82- In bone marrow transplants, the recipients bone
marrow cells are destroyed by radiation,
eliminating the recipients immune system. - The lymphocytes in the bone marrow transplant may
produce a graft versus host reaction to the host
cells if the MHC - molecules are not
- closely matched.
83Immune System Disorders
- Allergies are hypersensitivities to certain
environmental antigens, or allergens. -
- - IgE antibodies produced in an initial
exposure may bind to mast cells and cause a
histamine response.
84- Anaphylactic shock is a severe allergic response
in which vasodilation leads to a life-threatening
drop in blood pressure
85- Autoimmune disease immune system turns against
itself - Ex - lupus, rheumatoid arthritis,
insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, and multiple
sclerosis.
rheumatoid arthritis
86Lupus
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a long-term
autoimmune disorder that may affect the skin,
joints, kidneys, brain, and other organs.
87Multiple Sclerosis
- Multiple sclerosis (or MS) is a chronic, often
disabling disease that attacks the central
nervous system (CNS). - Symptoms may be mild, such as numbness in the
limbs, or severe, such as paralysis or loss of
vision.
88- The bodys own defense system attacks myelin, the
fatty substance that surrounds and protects the
nerve fibers in the central nervous system. The
nerve fibers themselves can also be damaged.
89- Immunodeficiency may be developmental (genetic)
or in response to a chemical, drugs, cancer,
viruses (HIV). - Severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID), is a
genetic disorder in which both B cells and T
cells) of the adaptive immune system are impaired
due to a defect in one of several possible genes.
90- Exercising to exhaustion and stress can impair
the immune system.
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92Enzyme-Linked ImmunoSorbent Assay (ELISA)
used to detect antibodies
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94Generalized ELISA protocol for detecting a target
antigen. Enzyme (E) is conjugated to secondary
antibody.
Bind sample(antigen) to support
Add primary antibody wash
Add secondary antibody-enzyme conjugate wash
Add substrate. If enzyme is present, then a
color change (blue) will occur.
95The need for controls
- Positive primary antibodies
- - to make sure assay is working
- Negative buffer
- - to make sure all samples are not positive
and thus get a false positive
96HINTS!
- Label correctly!
- Do not contaminate!
- You can use 40 uL instead of 50 uL with the
micropipettes. Amounts are not critical. This
is a qualitative test! - If you mess up, you will have to repeat the test
AFTER SCHOOL!
97If serial dilutions are used, you can see
different intensities of antibodies present.
98Cell signaling and immunology
- In cells of the immune system, signaling leads to
activation of cell-type specific immune
activities. - Ligand interaction with receptors on the surface
of cells of the immune system triggers
intracellular signal transduction directly or
through association with assistant signal
transduction molecules.
99Immune signaling serves a variety of functions
- apoptotic deletion of cells bearing receptors
against self-peptides - activation of immune and inflammatory response
activities
100Signaling in the innate response
- Toll-like receptors (TLRs) appear to be one of
the most ancient, conserved components of the
immune system, and are the basic signaling
receptors of the innate immune system. - TLRs trigger signals evoking synthesis and
secretion of cytokines and activation of host
defenses through various pathways.
101Cytokines cell to cell
- secreted by immune cells in response to cellular
signaling, and bind to specific membrane
receptors, which then signal the cell via second
messengers, often tyrosine kinases, to alter
cellular activity (gene expression). - Interleukins comprise the largest class of
cytokines, and are manufactured by one leukocyte
to act on other leukocytes as signaling ligands.
Cytokines are often produced in cascades.
102 Cytokine Signaling
103Signaling in the adaptive immune response
- Ligands
- Antigens
- MHC processed peptide pieces
- Hematopoietic growth factors (cause blood cells
to grow and mature)
104- Signal Transduction
- Tyrosine-kinases
- 2nd messengers Ca ions, IP3,
- G-proteins, etc.
- Activation of transcription factors
- Response
- Transcribe mRNA into proteins for immune
activation
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