Title: The Lymphatic System
1The Lymphatic System
- Chapter 43, Campbell, 6th edition
- Nancy G. Morris
- Volunteer State Community College
2The fluid compartment includes
- plasma of the blood
- interstitial fluid of the tissues
- lymph of lymphatic system
3Plasma
- 90 water
- contains electrolytes inorganic salts
(dissolved ions) that maintain osmotic balance
buffer blood (electrolyte balance maintained by
kidneys) - contains plasma proteins
- immunoglobulins transport lipids through the
blood - fibrinogens blood clotting
- serum plasma clotting factors
- transports nutrients, metabolic wastes,
respiratory gases, hormones
4Cellular elements include
- Erythrocytes RBCs
- Leukocytes -WBCs
- Platelets - thrombocytes
5Erythrocytes RBCs
- biconcave discs that transport oxygen
- mm3 of human blood contains 5-6 million RBCs
- in mammals, RBCs lack nuclei mitochondria
they generate ATP exclusively by anaerobic
metabolism (Who knew?) - contain hemoglobin, an iron containing protein
that irreversibly binds oxygen about 250 million
molecules per erythrocyte
6Leukocytes
- white blood cells function in defense and
immunity - 5,000-10,000 per mm3 of blood
- 5 types of leukocytes
- lymphocytes (specialized during infection
produce bodys immune response) - basophils
- eosinophils
- neutrophils
- monocytes
7SEM specialized lymphocytes attacking a cancer
cell
8Platelets or thrombocytes
- fragments of cells 2-3 µm in diameter
- originate in bone marrow
- lack nuclei
- function in blood clotting
9Replacement of cellular elements
- cells must be replaced as they wear out
- average RBC lives 3-4 months before being
destroyed by phagocytic cells in the liver
spleen - components are usually recycled
- pluripotent stem cells give rise to all three
blood cells - stem cells form early in the embryo are renewed
by mitosis - found in red bone marrow, especially ribs,
vertebrae, breastbone, pelvis
10Blood clotting
- a clot forms when platelets clump together to
form a temporary plug - platelets release clotting factors that initiate
a cascade reaction which prothrombin is converted
to thrombin - thrombin converts inactive water -soluble
fibrinogen to active insoluble fibrin - anticlotting factors prevent spontaneous clotting
in healthy tissues
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12Circulatory Diseases
- Hemophilia an inherited defect in any step
involved in clot formation - Thrombus spontaneous clot form
- Cardiovascular disease leading cause of death
in US (50 of all deaths) - Heart attack death of the cardiac muscle
- Embolus moving clot
- Atherosclerosis ( Figure 42.16)
13Circulatory Health
- Smoking
- Lack of exercise
- Diet high in animal fat
- All lifestyle choices correlate directly
- with an increased risk of cardiovascular
- disease.
14Lymphatic system
- returns fluid from interstitial spaces to the
circulatory system - includes satellite organs important to defense
- filter lymph by removing and phagocytosizing
pathogens
15Vocabulary
- Lymph
- the fluid part
- (similar in composition to the interstitial
fluid) - Lymph vessels
- transport lymph
- have valves to prevent backflow of fluid
- depend on movement of skeletal muscles to squeeze
lymph along
16Vocabulary
- Lymph nodes
- specialized lymphatic tissue
- filter the lymph attack viruses bacteria
- Lymph capillaries
- penetrate the small intestine villi, absorb
fats, transport from digestive to circulatory
system
17The human lymphatic system
18An overview of the bodys defenses
19First line of defense
- Skin
- Unbroken skin is a barrier against bacteria
viruses - Secretions from sweat sebaceous glands produce
a pH of 3 to 5 - Bacterial colonization inhibited by washing
action of sweat, tears, saliva mucous - Secretions contain antimicrobial proteins
lysozyme an enzyme which digests bacterial cell
walls - Mucous membranes
20First line of defense
- Mucous membranes
- Secrete mucus a viscous fluid which traps
microbes and others particles - Line the digestive, respiratory, and
genitourinary tracts
21First-line respiratory defenses ciliated
epithelial cells and mucus producing cells of the
respiratory system
22Second line of defense
- Phagocytosis -- the bodys internal mechanism of
nonspecific defense - Neutrophils
- Constitute about 60-70 of all leukocytes
- Average life span only a few days
- Upon injury, chemicals released by the invading
microbes attract neutrophils to the site. This
is chemotaxis.
23Phagocytic Neutrophil
24Phagocytosis by a macrophage
25Second line of defense
- Monocytes - 5 of all leukocytes
- Migrate into tissues developing into macrophages
(big eaters) - Extend long pseudopodia that can attach to
polysaccharides on the microbes surface, engulf
microbe, and lysosomes digest - Some bacteria have capsules to which macrophages
can not attach - Other are resistant to lysosomal destruction
26Second line of defense
- Figure 43.4 (p. 842)
- The Human Lymphatic System
- Returns fluids from the interstitial fluid to the
circulatory system - Adenoids - Right lymphatic duct
- Tonsils - Thoracic duct
- Lymph nodes - Peyers patches
- Thymus
- Spleen
- Appendix
27The human lymphatic system
28Second Line of Defense
- Eosinophils
- 1.5 of all leukocytes
- Defense against larger parasitic invaders such as
blood flukes, Schistosoma mansoni - These cells position themselves against the
parasite wall discharge destructive enzymes
29Natural Killer (NK) cells
- Nonspecific defense
- Do not attack the microorganism directly but
destroy virus-infected body cells abnormal
cells that could form tumors - Not phagocytic
- Attach the cell membrane causing lysis
30The Inflammatory Response
- Figure 43.5
- Upon injury, blood flow to the injury increases
- This is responsible for the characteristic
redness heat of inflammation - The filled capillaries leak fluid into
neighboring tissues causing edema (swelling)
31Inflammatory Response
- Initiated by chemical signals
- Some arise from the invading organism itself
- Others, such as histamine (produced by
basophils), are released by cells of the body in
response to tissue injury
32- Release of histamine or prostaglandins
- Increased permeability leaking attraction of
phagocytes and lymphocytes - Clot formation
- Phagocytes consume pathogens debris
33Nonspecific Defense
- Figure 43.1
- 1st line skin, mucous membranes, their
secretions - 2nd line phagocytic leukocytes, antimicrobial
proteins, inflammatory response - These are nonspecific because they do not
distinguish among specific pathogens.
34Antimicrobial Proteins
- Lysozyme enzyme in tears, saliva
- Complement system a set of 20 serum proteins
which carry out a cascade of steps leading to the
lysis of microbes - Interferon secreted by virus infected cells,
spread to adjacent non-infected cells and prevent
their infection
35How specific immunity arises
- Lymphocytes
- Provide specificity
- Provide diversity
- Because lymphocytes recognize respond to
specific microbes and foreign molecules, they are
said to display specificity. - A foreign molecule that elicits a specific
response by a lymphocyte is an antigen.
36How specific immunity arises
- Vertebrates have two cells specialized in
different types of antigens and they carry out
different defensive actions. - B lymphocytes (mature in bone marrow)
- T lymphocytes (mature in thymus)
37How specific immunity arises
- Antigens can elicit a response by activating B
lymphocytes to secrete proteins called
antibodies. - Antigens have a quaternary structure for which a
specific complimentary antibody is synthesized. - Antigen is a contraction of antibody-generator.
38How specific immunity arises
- B cells have specific antigen receptors on the
plasma membrane (membrane antibodies or
immunoglobulins). Antigens can be agglutinated by
the receptors on the surface or by free
antibodies that have synthesized secreted by B
cells. - T cell receptors are just as specific but are
never secreted. - A single B or T lymphocyte bears about 100,000
antigen receptors, all with exactly the same
specificity.
39Specific receptors of lymphocytes
40Antigens elicit 2 responses
- Immune response
- Immunological memory
41- Each antigen, by binding to specific receptors,
selectively activates a tiny fraction of cells
from the bodys diverse pool of lymphocytes this
relatively small number of selected cells gives
rise to clones of thousands of cells, all
specific for and dedicated to eliminating that
antigen. - This is clonal selection.
42Primary Immune Response
- proliferation and differentiation of lymphocytes
that occurs the first time the body is exposed to
an antigen - requires 10 17 days from initial exposure to
antigen for lymphocytes to response with maximum
force - During this period, plasma cells are cloned which
produce antibodies against the invading antigens.
43Clonal Selection Figure 43.6
Antigens
Cell proliferation
clone of plasma cells
Clone of memory cells
44Clonal Selection
45Secondary Immune Response
- occurs if and when an individual is exposed a
second time to the same antigen - the response is faster (only 2 7 days),
stronger, prolonged. - Figure 43.7
- Memory cells are poised to proliferate
differentiate rapidly.
46Immunological Memory
47Immune Response
- Humoral Immunity
- Involves B cell activation and results from the
production of antibodies that circulate in the
blood plasma lymph. (Fluids were long ago
called humors.) - Defend against free bacteria, toxins, and viruses
in body fluid. - DEFEND AGAINST EXTRACELLULAR PATHOGENS
48B Lymphocyte
49Humoral Immunity
50Immune Response
- Cell-mediated immunity
- Active against bacteria viruses within infected
body cells and against fungi, protozoa,
parasitic worms - Crucial in transplanted tissue cancer cells
both of which are identified as nonself. - DEFEND AGAINST INTRACELLULAR PATHOGENS
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52Overview of Immune Responses
- Figure 43.10
- Figure 43.16
53Immunity
- Can be achieved either naturally or artificially
- Active immunity occurs when the immune system
responds to a foreign antigen acquired either by
natural infection or artificially by
immunization. - Passive immunity occurs when antibodies are
transferred from one individual to another
(mother to fetus mother to breastfeeding child
artificially when antibodies produced by one
organism transferred to another organism
54- Immune systems capacity to distinguish self from
nonself limits blood transfusion and tissue
transplant - Abnormal immune function can lead to disease
(allergy, rheumatoid arthritis, insulin-dependent
diabetes) - AIDS immunodeficiency disease caused by a
virus. Figure 43.19
55Budding HIV
56HIV on Lymphocyte
57HIV Infections Stages
58Cytotaxic Cell
59Cytotaxic Cell