Title: Natural%20Defenses%20against%20Disease
1Natural Defensesagainst Disease
2Natural Defenses against Disease
- Animal Defense Systems
- Nonspecific Defenses
- Specific Defenses The Immune System
- B Cells The Humoral Immune Response
- T Cells The Cellular Immune Response
- The Genetic Basis of Antibody Diversity
- Disorders of the Immune System
3Animal Defense Systems
- Animal defense systems are based on the
distinction between self and nonself. - There are two general types of defense
mechanisms - Nonspecific defenses, or innate defenses, are
inherited mechanisms that protect the body from
many different pathogens. - Specific defenses are adaptive mechanisms that
protect against specific targets.
4Animal Defense Systems
- Components of the defense system are distributed
throughout the body. - Lymphoid tissues (thymus, bone marrow, spleen,
lymph nodes) are essential parts of the defense
system. - Blood plasma suspends red and white blood cells
and platelets. - Red blood cells are found in the closed
circulatory system. - White blood cells and platelets are found in the
closed circulatory system and in the lymphatic
system.
5Animal Defense Systems
- Lymph consists of fluids that accumulate outside
of the closed circulatory system in the lymphatic
system. - The lymphatic system is a branching system of
tiny capillaries connecting larger vessels. - These lymph ducts eventually lead to a large
lymph duct that connects to a major vein near the
heart. - At sites along lymph vessels are small, roundish
lymph nodes. - Lymph nodes contain a variety of white blood
cells.
6Figure 18.1 The Human Lymphatic system
7Animal Defense Systems
- White blood cells are important in defense.
- All blood cells originate from stem cells in the
bone marrow. - White blood cells (leukocytes) are clear and have
a nucleus and organelles. - Red blood cells are smaller and lose their nuclei
before they become functional. - White blood cells can leave the circulatory
system. - The number of white blood cells sometimes rises
in response to invading pathogens.
8Animal Defense Systems
- There are two main groups of white blood cells
phagocytes and lymphocytes. - Phagocytes engulf and digest foreign materials.
- Lymphocytes are most abundant. There are two
types B and T cells. - T cells migrate from the circulation to the
thymus, where they mature. - B cells circulate and also collect in lymph
vessels, and make antibodies.
9Figure 18.2 Blood Cells (Part 1)
10Figure 18.2 Blood Cells (Part 2)
11Figure 18.2 Blood Cells (Part 3)
12Animal Defense Systems
- Four groups of proteins play key roles in
defending against disease - Antibodies, secreted by B cells, bind
specifically to certain substances. - T cell receptors are cell surface receptors that
bind nonself substances on the surface of other
cells. - Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) proteins
are exposed outside cells of mammals. These
proteins help to distinguish self from nonself. - Cytokines are soluble signal proteins released by
T cells. They bind and alter the behavior of
their target cells.
13Nonspecific Defenses
- The skin acts as a physical barrier to pathogens.
- Bacteria and fungi on the surface of the body
(normal flora) compete for space and nutrients
against pathogens. - Tears, nasal mucus, and saliva contain the enzyme
lysozyme that attacks the cell walls of many
bacteria. - Mucus and cilia in the respiratory system trap
pathogens and remove them. - Ingested pathogens can be destroyed by the
hydrochloric acid and proteases in the stomach. - In the small intestine, bile salts kill some
pathogens.
14Nonspecific Defenses
- Vertebrate blood contains about 20 antimicrobial
complement proteins. - Complement proteins provide three types of
defenses - They attach to microbes, helping phagocytes
recognize and destroy them. - They activate the inflammation response and
attract phagocytes to the site of infection. - They lyse invading cells.
15Nonspecific Defenses
- Interferons are produced by cells that are
infected by a virus. - All interferons are glycoproteins consisting of
about 160 amino acids. - They increase resistance of neighboring cells to
infections by the same or other viruses. - Each vertebrate species produces at least three
different interferons.
16Nonspecific Defenses
- Phagocytes ingest pathogens. There are several
types of phagocytes - Neutrophils attack pathogens in infected tissue.
- Monocytes mature into macrophages. They live
longer and consume larger numbers of pathogens
than do neutrophils. Some roam and others are
stationary in lymph nodes and lymphoid tissue. - Eosinophils kill parasites, such as worms, that
have been coated with antibodies. - Dendritic cells have highly folded plasma
membranes that can capture invading pathogens.
17Nonspecific Defenses
- Natural killer cells are a class of nonphagocytic
white blood cells - They can initiate the lysis of virus-infected
cells and some tumor cells.
18Nonspecific Defenses
- The inflammation response is used in dealing with
infection or tissue damage. - Mast cells and white blood cells called basophils
release histamine, which triggers inflammation. - Histamine causes capillaries to become leaky,
allowing plasma and phagocytes to escape into the
tissue. - Complement proteins and other chemical signals
attract phagocytes. Neutrophils arrive first,
then monocytes (which become macrophages).
19Nonspecific Defenses
- The macrophages engulf invaders and debris and
are responsible for most of the healing. - They produce several cytokines, which may signal
the brain to produce a fever. - Pus, composed of dead cells and leaked fluid, may
accumulate.
20Figure 18.4 Interactions of Cells and Chemical
Signals in Inflammation (Part 1)
21Figure 18.4 Interactions of Cells and Chemical
Signals in Inflammation (Part 2)
22Nonspecific Defenses
- An invading pathogen is a signal that triggers
the bodys defense mechanisms. - A signal transduction pathway acts as the link
between a signal and the immune response. - The membrane protein toll is the receptor.
- Toll is part of a protein kinase cascade that
results in the transcription of at least 40 genes
involved in both specific and nonspecific
defenses. - The signal molecules are made only by microbes.
23Figure 18.5 Cell Signaling and Defense
24Specific Defenses The Immune System
- Four characteristics of the immune system
- 1. Specificity Antigens are organisms or
molecules that are specifically recognized by T
cell receptors and antibodies. - The sites on antigens that the immune system
recognizes are the antigenic determinants (or
epitopes). - Each antigen typically has several different
antigenic determinants. - The host creates T cells and/or antibodies that
are specific to the antigenic determinants.
25Figure 18.6 Each Antibody Matches an Antigenic
Determinant
26Specific Defenses The Immune System
- 2. Diversity
- It is estimated that the human immune system can
distinguish and respond to 10 million different
antigenic determinants. - 3. Distinguishing self from nonself
- Each normal cell in the body bears a tremendous
number of antigenic determinants. It is crucial
that the immune system leave these alone. - 4. Immunological memory
- Once exposed to a pathogen, the immune system
remembers it and mounts future responses much
more rapidly.
27Specific Defenses The Immune System
- The immune system has two responses against
invaders The humoral immune response and the
cellular immune response. - The two responses operate in concert and share
mechanisms.
28Specific Defenses The Immune System
- The humoral immune response involves antibodies
that recognize antigenic determinants by shape
and composition. - Some antibodies are soluble proteins that travel
free in blood and lymph. Others are integral
membrane proteins on B cells. - When a pathogen invades the body, it may be
detected by and bound by a B cell whose membrane
antibody fits one of its potential antigenic
determinants. - This binding activates the B cell, which makes
multiple soluble copies of an antibody with the
same specificity as its membrane antibody.
29Specific Defenses The Immune System
- The cellular immune response is able to detect
antigens that reside within cells. - It destroys virus-infected or mutated cells.
- Its main component consists of T cells.
- T cells have T cell receptors that can recognize
and bind specific antigenic determinants.
30Specific Defenses The Immune System
- Several questions arise that are fundamental to
understanding the immune system. - How does the enormous diversity of B cells and T
cells arise? - How do B and T cells specific to antigens
proliferate? - Why dont antibodies and T cells attack and
destroy our own bodies? - How can the memory of postexposure be explained?
31Specific Defenses The Immune System
- Clonal selection explains much of this.
- The healthy body contains a great variety of B
cells and T cells, each of which is specific for
only one antigen. - Normally, the number of any given type of B cell
present is relatively low. - When a B cell binds an antigen, the B cell
divides and differentiates into plasma cells
(which produce antibodies) and memory cells. - Thus, the antigen selects and activates a
particular antibody-producing cell.
32Figure 18.7 Clonal Selection in B Cells
33Specific Defenses The Immune System
- An activated lymphocyte (B cell or T cell)
produces two types of daughter cells effector
and memory cells. - Effector B cells, called plasma cells, produce
antibodies. - Effector T cells release cytokines.
- Memory cells live longer and retain the ability
to divide quickly to produce more effector and
more memory cells.
34Specific Defenses The Immune System
- When the body encounters an antigen for the first
time, a primary immune response is activated. - When the antigen appears again, a secondary
immune response occurs. This response is much
more rapid, because of immunological memory.
35Figure 18.8 Immunological Memory
36Specific Defenses The Immune System
- Artificial immunity is acquired by the
introduction of antigenic determinants into the
body. - Vaccination is inoculation with whole pathogens
that have been modified so they cannot cause
disease. - Immunization is inoculation with antigenic
proteins, pathogen fragments, or other molecular
antigens. - Immunization and vaccination initiate a primary
immune response that generates memory cells
without making the person ill.
37Specific Defenses The Immune System
- Antigens used for immunization or vaccination
must be processed so that they will provoke an
immune response but not cause disease. There are
three principle ways to do this - Attenuation involves reducing the toxicity of the
antigenic molecule or organism. - Biotechnology can produce antigenic fragments
that activate lymphocytes but do not have the
harmful part of the protein toxin. - DNA vaccines are being developed that will
introduce a gene encoding an antigen into the
body.
38Specific Defenses The Immune System
- The body is tolerant of its own molecules, even
those that would cause an immune response in
other individuals of the same species. - Failure to do so results in autoimmune disease.
- This self tolerance is based on two mechanisms
clonal deletion and clonal anergy.
39Specific Defenses The Immune System
- Clonal deletion eliminates B or T cells from the
immune system at some point during
differentiation. - About 90 percent of all B cells made in the bone
marrow are removed in this way. - Any immature B cell in the marrow that could
mount an immune response against self antigens is
eliminated. - The same is true for T cells, but the selection
occurs in the thymus. - Elimination is accomplished by means of apoptosis.
40Specific Defenses The Immune System
- Clonal anergy is the suppression of the immune
response. - Before a mature T cell mounts an immune response,
it must recognize both an antigen on a cell and
another molecule, CD28 (co-stimulatory signal),
which is not present on most body cells. - CD28 is present only on certain
antigen-presenting cells, including macrophages
and the dendritic cells in the linings of the
respiratory and digestive tracts.
41Specific Defenses The Immune System
- Immunological tolerance is a poorly understood
but clearly observable phenomenon. - Exposing a fetus to an antigen before birth
provides later tolerance to the antigen. - Continued exposure is necessary to maintain the
tolerance. - Some individuals experience the opposite effect
they lose tolerance to themselves, which results
in autoimmune disease.
42B Cells The Humoral Immune Response
- B cells are the basic component of the humoral
immune system. - For a B cell to differentiate into a plasma cell,
it must bind an antigenic determinant. - A helper T cell (TH) must also bind the same
determinant as it is presented by an
antigen-presenting cell. - Cellular division and differentiation of the B
cell is stimulated by a signal from the activated
TH cell. - Activated B cells become plasma cells and memory
cells.
43Figure 18.9 A Plasma Cell
44B Cells The Humoral Immune Response
- Antibody molecules are proteins called
immunoglobulins. - All are composed of one or more tetramers
consisting of four polypeptide chains. - Two identical light chains and two identical
heavy chains make up the tetrameric units. - Disulfide bonds hold the chains together.
- Both the light and heavy chains on each peptide
have variable and constant regions. - The constant regions are similar among the
immunoglobulins and determine the class of the
antibody.
45B Cells The Humoral Immune Response
- The variable regions differ in the amino acid
sequences at the antigen-binding site and are
responsible for the diversity of antibody
specificity. - The heavy and light chain variable regions align
and form the binding sites. - Each tetramer has two identical antigen-binding
sites, making the antibody bivalent. - The enormous range of antibody specificities is
made possible by the recombination of numerous
versions of coding regions for the variable
regions.
46Figure 18.10 Structure of Immunoglobulins (Part
1)
47Figure 18.10 Structure of Immunoglobulins (Part
2)
48B Cells The Humoral Immune Response
- The five immunoglobulin classes are based on
differences in the constant regions of the heavy
chain. - IgG molecules make up 80 percent of the total
immunoglobulin content of the bloodstream. - They are the primary product of a secondary
immune response. - The constant regions of IgG antibodies are like
handles that make it easier for a macrophage to
grab and ingest antibody-coated antigens.
49Figure 18.11 IgG Antibodies Promote Phagocytosis
50Table 18.3 Antibody Classes (Part 1)
51Table 18.3 Antibody Classes (Part 2)
52B Cells The Humoral Immune Response
- The normal antibody response is polyclonal
Because most antigens have more than one
antigenic determinant, animals injected with a
single antigen generally produce several
different antibodies. - Polyclonal antibodies may have some
cross-reactivity with other molecules that have
similar regions within the molecule.
53B Cells The Humoral Immune Response
- A monoclonal antibody is made by a single clonal
line of B cells and binds to only one antigenic
determinant. - Monoclonal antibodies are very useful for
immunoassays to determine the concentrations of
other molecules that are present in minute
amounts. - Monoclonal antibodies are also used in
immunotherapy and passive immunization.
54B Cells The Humoral Immune Response
- B cells cannot be cultured. To overcome this
problem, a cancerous myeloma cell is fused to the
plasma cell artificially. - These new cells, called hybridomas, live long and
produce monoclonal antibodies.
55Figure 18.12 Creating Hybridomas for the
Production of Monoclonal Antibodies (Part 1)
56Figure 18.12 Creating Hybridomas for the
Production of Monoclonal Antibodies (Part 2)
57T Cells The Cellular Immune Response
- T cells, like B cells, possess specific surface
receptors. - The genes that code for T cell receptors are
similar to those for immunoglobulins. - T cell receptors also have constant and variable
regions. - A major difference between antibodies and T cell
receptors is that T cell receptors bind only to
an antigenic determinant that is displayed on the
surface of an antigen-presenting cell.
58Figure 18.13 A T Cell Receptor
59T Cells The Cellular Immune Response
- Activated T cells give rise to two types of
effector cells. - Cytotoxic cells, or TC, recognize virus-infected
cells and kill them by causing them to lyse. - Helper T cells, or TH cells, assist both the
cellular and humoral immune systems. - Activated helper T cells proliferate and
stimulate both B and TC cells to divide.
60Figure 18.14 Cytotoxic T Cells in Action
61T Cells The Cellular Immune Response
- The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) gene
products are plasma membrane glycoproteins. - These molecules are called human leukocyte
antigens (HLA) in humans and H-2 proteins in
mice. - There are three classes of MHC proteins.
62T Cells The Cellular Immune Response
- Class I MHC proteins are present on the surface
of every nucleated cell in animals. - When cellular proteins are degraded in the
proteasome, an MHC I protein may bind a fragment
and travel to the plasma membrane to present it
outside on the cells plasma membrane surface. - TC cells have a surface protein called CD8 that
recognizes MHC I.
63Figure 18.16 The Interaction between T Cells and
Antigen-Presenting Cells (Part 1)
64Figure 18.16 The Interaction between T Cells and
Antigen-Presenting Cells (Part 2)
65Figure 18.16 The Interaction between T Cells and
Antigen-Presenting Cells (Part 3)
66T Cells The Cellular Immune Response
- Class II MHC proteins are found mostly on the
surface of B cells, macrophages, and other
antigen-presenting cells. - When an antigen is ingested by an
antigen-presenting cell, it is broken down and
fragments are presented at the cell surface by
class II MHC proteins. - TH cells have CD4 surface proteins that recognize
MHC II.
67Figure 18.15 Macrophages Are Antigen-Presenting
Cells
68T Cells The Cellular Immune Response
- Class III MHC proteins include some of the
proteins of the complement system that interact
with antigenantibody complexes to cause lysis of
foreign cells.
69T Cells The Cellular Immune Response
- T cells recognize the MHC I or II and then
inspect the attached fragment. - There are three different loci for each MHC I and
for each MHC II. - The six loci have as many as 100 different
alleles. - This is why different individuals generally have
different MHC genotypes.
70T Cells The Cellular Immune Response
- TH cells bind to an antigen presented to it by an
antigen-presenting macrophage. - The then-activated TH cell produces and secretes
cytokine molecules, which attach to their own
specific cell membrane receptor proteins. - The cell can then divide to produce clones
capable of interacting with B cells. - These steps, called the activation phase, occur
in the lymphatic tissues.
71T Cells The Cellular Immune Response
- In the effector stage, an antigen of the same
sort that was processed by the macrophage binds
to a specific IgM receptor on the surface of a B
cell. - The B cell degrades the antigen and presents a
piece of processed antigen in a class II MHC
protein on its cell surface. - One of the TH cells created in the activation
stage recognizes the processed antigen and class
II MHC protein on the surface of the B cell. - The TH cell releases cytokines, which activate B
cell proliferation and differentiation into
plasma cells and memory cells. - The plasma cells secrete antibodies.
72Figure 18.17 (a) Phases of the Humoral and
Cellular Immune Responses (Part 1)
73Figure 18.17 (a) Phases of the Humoral and
Cellular Immune Responses (Part 2)
74T Cells The Cellular Immune Response
- Like class II MHC molecules, class I MHC
molecules also present processed antigen to T
cells. - Foreign protein fragments are bound by class I
MHC molecules and carried to the plasma membrane,
where TC cells can check them. - If a cell has been infected by a virus, or has
mutated, it may present protein fragments that
are not normally found in the body. - If a TC cell binds to the MHC Iantigen complex,
the TC cell is activated to proliferate and
differentiate.
75T Cells The Cellular Immune Response
- In the effector stage, TC cells once again bind
to the cells bearing MHC Iantigen complex and
secrete molecules that lyse the cell. - TC cells can also bind to a specific target cell
receptor (called Fas). - This binding initiates apoptosis in the target
(for example, virus-infected) cell. - This system helps rid the body of virus-infected
cells. It also helps to destroy some cancer
tumors.
76Figure 18.17 (b) Phases of the Humoral and
Cellular Immune Responses (Part 1)
77Figure 18.17 (b) Phases of the Humoral and
Cellular Immune Responses (Part 2)
78T Cells The Cellular Immune Response
- T cells developing in the thymus are tested to
ensure that they will be functional and will not
attack normal self antigens. - Each new T cell must recognize the bodys MHC
proteins. If it fails to do so, it dies within
about 3 days. - If the developing T cell binds to self MHC
proteins and to one of the bodys own normal
antigens, it undergoes apoptosis. - If these T cells were not destroyed they would be
harmful or lethal to the animal. - If the T cell survives these tests, it becomes
either a TC or TH cell.
79T Cells The Cellular Immune Response
- For organ transplants to be successful, MHC
molecules must match otherwise, these same
molecules will act as antigens. - The cellular immune system is responsible for
rejection. - Rejection problems can be controlled somewhat by
treating patients with immunosuppressing drugs
such as cyclosporin.
80The Genetic Basis of Antibody Diversity
- As B cells develop, their genomes become modified
until the cell can produce one specific type of
antibody. - If we had a different gene for each antibody our
immune systems are capable of producing, our
entire genome would be taken up by antibody
genes. - Instead, just a small number of genes that can
recombine to generate multitudes of possibilities
are responsible for the vast diversity of
antibodies.
81The Genetic Basis of Antibody Diversity
- Each gene encoding an immunoglobin is in reality
a supergene assembled from several clusters of
smaller genes located along part of a chromosome.
- During B cell development, these variable regions
rearrange and join. - Pieces of DNA are deleted, and DNA segments
formerly distant from one another are joined
together. - Immunoglobulin genes are assembled from randomly
selected pieces of DNA.
82Figure 18.18 Heavy-Chain Genes
83The Genetic Basis of Antibody Diversity
- Each B cell precursor assembles its own two
specific antibody genes, one for a heavy chain,
and the other for a light chain. - In both humans and mice, the DNA segments coding
for immunoglobulin heavy chains are on one
chromosome and those for light chains are on
another.
84The Genetic Basis of Antibody Diversity
- There are multiple genes coding for each of the
four kinds of segments in the polypeptide chain
for the heavy chain in mice 100 V, 30 D, 6 J,
and 8 C regions. - Each B cell randomly selects one gene for each of
the V, D, J, and C regions. - A similar process occurs for the light chain.
- Theoretically, there are 144,000 x 144,000
possible combinations of light and heavy chains,
i.e, 21 billion possibilities.
85Figure 18. Heavy-Chain Gene Rearrangement and
Splicing (Part 1)
86Figure 18. Heavy-Chain Gene Rearrangement and
Splicing (Part 2)
87The Genetic Basis of Antibody Diversity
- Additional diversity is possible because the
recombinations do not occur at precise segments.
Imprecise recombinations can create new codons at
the junctions. - After DNA fragments are cut out and before they
are joined, an enzyme, terminal transferase, adds
some nucleotides to the free end. This adds even
more variability by causing frame shifts and new
codons. - Finally, the relatively high mutation rate in
immunoglobulin genes leads to even more diversity.
88The Genetic Basis of Antibody Diversity
- B cells make only one class of antibody at a
time, but class switching can occur. For
example, the B cell can switch from IgM to IgG. - The constant region for IgM is coded for by the m
segment. - If the cell becomes a plasma cell, another DNA
splicing event positions the heavy-chain variable
region next to a constant segment farther down
the DNA strand, and the m segment is deleted. - Class switching is triggered and controlled by a
TH cell via cytokine signals.
89Figure 18.20 Class Switching
90Disorders of the Immune System
- The human immune system can overreact to a dose
of antigen and produce an inappropriate immune
response. Allergies are the most familiar
example. - Immediate hypersensitivity occurs when too much
IgE is made. - If the IgE binds with antigens, mast cells and
basophils are triggered to release histamine. - Delayed hypersensitivity does not begin until
hours after exposure to an antigen and involves
antigen-presenting cells and T cells. - The response can activate macrophages and cause
tissue damage.
91Disorders of the Immune System
- If clonal deletion fails, forbidden clones of B
and T cells directed against self-antigens are
sometimes made. - Examples of autoimmune diseases include
- Systemic lupus erythematosis
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Multiple sclerosis
- Insulin-dependent (juvenile-onset) diabetes
mellitus
92Disorders of the Immune System
- HIV (human immunodeficiency virus), which leads
to AIDS (acquired immune deficiency syndrome),
causes a depletion of TH cells. - It can be transmitted through blood or by
exposure of broken skin or an open wound to the
body fluids of an infected person.
93Figure 18.21 The Course of an HIV Infection
94Disorders of the Immune System
- HIV uses RNA as its genetic molecule.
- The core of the virus contains two identical
molecules of RNA and the enzymes reverse
transcriptase, integrase, and a protease. - The envelope is derived from the plasma membrane
of the cell in which the virus grew. - The envelope has glycoproteins gp120 and gp41
protruding. These proteins are necessary for the
targeting of TH cells. - The virus enters the cell via CD4 membrane
proteins on TH cells. The gp120 protein binds to
CD4.
95Disorders of the Immune System
- Once in the cell, reverse transcriptase makes a
DNA copy (cDNA) of the viral RNA, and cellular
DNA polymerase makes the complementary strand. - Reverse transcriptase is error prone this
elevates the mutation rate and adds to the
adaptability of the virus. - The cDNA integrates into the host DNA.
96Disorders of the Immune System
- Viruses are made when the TH cell is activated.
- Transcription of the viral DNA requires host
transcription factors and a viral protein, Tat. - The RNA is either spliced and translated or
unspliced to become the genetic molecule of a new
virus. - A viral protease is needed to cleave large viral
precursor proteins into smaller functional units. - Viral membrane proteins are synthesized on rough
ER, and glycosylation occurs within the ER and
Golgi complex.
97Disorders of the Immune System
- Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) was
developed in the late 1990s. - A protease inhibitor obstructs the active site of
the HIV protease. - Two reverse transcriptase inhibitors that
terminate the cDNA molecules prematurely are
used. - Unfortunately, 80 percent of patients taking
HAART develop mutant strains of HIV that are
resistant.
98Figure 18.22 Relationship Between TH Cell Count
and Opportunistic Infections