Title: Immunology: Animal Defense Systems
1Immunology Animal Defense Systems
31
2Chapter 31 Immunology Animal Defense Systems
- Key Concepts
- 31.1 Animals Use Innate and Adaptive Mechanisms
to Defend Themselves against Pathogens - 31.2 Innate Defenses Are Nonspecific
- 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is Specific
3Chapter 31 Immunology Animal Defense Systems
- Key Concepts
- 31.4 The Adaptive Humoral Immune Response
Involves Specific Antibodies - 31.5 The Adaptive Cellular Immune Response
Involves T Cells and Their Receptors
4Chapter 31 Opening Question
- How can a person survive an infection and be
resistant to further infection?
5Concept 31.1 Animals Use Innate and Adaptive
Mechanisms to Defend Themselves against Pathogens
- Animals have various means of defense against
pathogensagents that cause disease. - Two general types of defense mechanisms can
provide immunitythe ability to avoid disease
when invaded by a pathogen.
6Concept 31.1 Animals Use Innate and Adaptive
Mechanisms to Defend Themselves against Pathogens
- Innate immunitynonspecific, used against many
organisms - Includes barriers, such as skin and molecules
toxic to invaders, as first line of defense. - Second line of innate defenses includes
phagocytic cells, which ingest foreign cells and
other particles. - These defenses may be present all the time or
activated rapidly.
7Concept 31.1 Animals Use Innate and Adaptive
Mechanisms to Defend Themselves against Pathogens
- Adaptive immunity is specific
- Distinguishes between substances produced by self
and nonself. - Involves antibody proteins and others that bind
to and destroy pathogens. - Slow to develop and long-lasting, found only in
vertebrate animals.
8Table 31.1 Innate and Adaptive Immune Responses
to an Infection
9Concept 31.1 Animals Use Innate and Adaptive
Mechanisms to Defend Themselves against Pathogens
- Mammals have both kinds of defense systemsthey
work together as a coordinated system. - The main factors in immunity are specific cells
and proteins. - These are produced in the blood and lymphoid
tissues and circulate throughout the body
10Concept 31.1 Animals Use Innate and Adaptive
Mechanisms to Defend Themselves against Pathogens
- White blood cells, or leukocytes, are suspended
in the blood plasma. - Two kinds
- Phagocytes (such as macrophages) are large cells
that engulf pathogens and other substances by
phagocytosis. - Lymphocytes, which include B cells and T cells,
are involved in adaptive immunity
11Figure 31.1 White Blood Cells
12Concept 31.1 Animals Use Innate and Adaptive
Mechanisms to Defend Themselves against Pathogens
- Cellcell interactions in the mammalian defense
system involve four key protein types - Antibodiesproteins that bind specifically to
substances identified by the immune system - Antibodies are produced by B cells.
13Concept 31.1 Animals Use Innate and Adaptive
Mechanisms to Defend Themselves against Pathogens
- Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) proteins
are found in two classes - MHC I proteins are found on most cell surfaces
- MHC II proteins are found on most immune system
cells - MHC proteins are important self-identifying
labels.
14Concept 31.1 Animals Use Innate and Adaptive
Mechanisms to Defend Themselves against Pathogens
- T cell receptors are integral membrane proteins
on T cells, recognize and bind nonself molecules
on other cells - Cytokines are soluble signaling proteins that
bind to a cells surface receptors and alter that
cells behavior
15Concept 31.2 Innate Defenses Are Nonspecific
- Nonspecific defenses are general mechanismsthe
first line of defense. - They are genetically programmed and ready to
go. - In mammals, they include physical barriers as
well as cellular and chemical defenses.
16Concept 31.2 Innate Defenses Are Nonspecific
- Skin is a primary nonspecific defense.
- The physical barrier of the skin as well as the
saltiness of the skin make it hard for bacteria
to penetrate. - Normal florathe bacteria and fungi that usually
live on body surfaces - They are part of the defense system because they
compete with pathogens for nutrients and space.
17Figure 31.2 Innate Immunity
18Concept 31.2 Innate Defenses Are Nonspecific
- Mucus is secreted by mucous membranes. Mucus
traps microorganisms so cilia can remove them. - Cilia continuously move the mucus plus debris up
towards nose and mouth. - Lysozyme, an enzyme that attacks bacterial cell
walls, is found in tears, nasal mucus, and saliva.
19Concept 31.2 Innate Defenses Are Nonspecific
- Mucous membranes produce defensins, peptides with
hydrophobic domains that are toxic to many
pathogens. - Defensins insert themselves into the plasma
membrane of the pathogen and make it permeable. - Harsh conditions in the internal environment,
such as extreme acidity, can also kill pathogens.
20In-Text Art, Ch. 31, p. 623 (1)
21Concept 31.2 Innate Defenses Are Nonspecific
- Pathogens that do penetrate surfaces encounter
more complex nonspecific second defenses - Activation of defensive cells
- Secretion of defensive proteinscomplement and
interferon proteins - Pathogenic cells, viruses, or fragments of
invaders can be recognized by phagocytes, which
then ingest them by phagocytosis.
22Concept 31.2 Innate Defenses Are Nonspecific
- Natural killer cellsa type of lymphocyte that
can detect virus-infected cells and some tumor
cells - Can initiate apoptosis in these cells
- Can interact with the specific defense mechanisms
and lyse cells labeled by antibodies
23Concept 31.2 Innate Defenses Are Nonspecific
- Vertebrate blood has antimicrobial proteins that
make up the complement system. - Proteins act in a cascadeeach protein activates
the next. - Provide three types of defense
- Attach to microbes and mark them for phagocytes
to engulf - Activate inflammation response and attract
phagocytes to site of infection - Lyse invading cells
24Concept 31.2 Innate Defenses Are Nonspecific
- Interferons are signaling molecules produced by
cells infected by a pathogen. - Interferons increase resistance of neighboring
cells to the pathogen by - Binding to receptors on noninfected cell
membranesstimulate a signaling pathway that
inhibits viral reproduction - Stimulating cells to hydrolyze pathogens
proteins to peptides
25Concept 31.2 Innate Defenses Are Nonspecific
- Inflammation is a coordinated response to
injuryit isolates damage, recruits cells against
pathogens, and promotes healing. - Mast cells are cells adhering to skin and organ
linings release chemical signals - Tumor necrosis factorcytokine that kills target
cells and activates immune cells
26Concept 31.2 Innate Defenses Are Nonspecific
- Prostaglandinsinitiate inflammation in nearby
tissues, dilate blood vessels and interact with
nerve endings, increasing sensitivity to pain - Histamineamino acid derivative that increases
permeability of blood vessels so white blood
cells can act on tissues
27Concept 31.2 Innate Defenses Are Nonspecific
- Symptoms of inflammation Redness, swelling,
heat, pain, result from dilation of blood vessels
in the area. - Phagocytes enter the area and engulf pathogens
and dead cells. - Cytokines may signal the brain to produce
fevertoxic to some pathogens. - Pus is a mixture of leaked fluid and dead cells.
- Platelets appear near a wound to promote healing.
28Concept 31.2 Innate Defenses Are Nonspecific
- The inflammation response may be too strong
- In an allergic reaction, a nonself molecule that
is normally harmless binds to mast cells, causing
the release of histamine and subsequent
inflammation. - In autoimmune diseases, the immune system fails
to distinguish between self and nonself, and
attacks tissues in the organisms own body. - In sepsis, the inflammation due to a bacterial
infection does not remain local.
29Figure 31.3 Interactions of Cells and Chemical
Signals Result in Inflammation
30Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- Scientists discovered that a factor that develops
in blood serum in response to a toxin is an
example of adaptive immunity that is specific to
the toxin. - Passive immunity is the development of immunity
from antibodies received from another individual.
31Figure 31.4 The Discovery of Specific Immunity
(Part 1)
32Figure 31.4 The Discovery of Specific Immunity
(Part 2)
33Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- Adaptive immunity has four key features
- Specificfocuses on antigens that are present
- Diverseresponds to novel pathogens
- Distinguishes self from nonself, prevents
destruction of self cells - Has immunological memory, to respond to a later
exposure to a pathogen
34Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- Specificitylymphocytes are crucial
- T cell receptors and antibodies bind to specific
nonself molecules (antigens). - Specific sites on the antigens are called
antigenic determinants, or epitopes.
35Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- An antigenic determinant is a specific portion of
a large molecule. - A single antigenic molecule can have multiple,
different antigenic determinants. - The host responds to an antigens presence with
highly specific defenses using T cell receptors
and antibodies.
36Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- Diversity
- The immune system must respond to a wide variety
of pathogens by activating specific lymphocytes
from a pool. - Diversity is generated primarily by DNA
changeschromosomal rearrangements and other
mutations. - The adaptive immune system is predevelopedall
of the machinery available to respond to an
immense diversity of antigens is already there,
even before the antigens are encountered.
37Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- Antigen binding selects a particular B or T
cell for proliferation. - A particular lymphocyte is selected via binding
and activation, and then it proliferates to
generate a clonecalled clonal selection for this
mechanism of producing an immune response.
38Figure 31.5 Clonal Selection in B Cells
39Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- Normally, the body is tolerant of its own
molecules develops during early B and T cell
differentiation. - Clonal deletionAny immature B and T cells that
show the potential to mount an immune response to
self antigens undergo apoptosis.
40Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- A failure of clonal deletionautoimmunity.
- In diseases such as systemic lupus erythematosis
(SLE) or Hashimotos thyroiditis, immune cells
mount a response against normal tissues.
41Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- Immunological memorythe immune system
remembers a pathogen after the first encounter. - Primary immune responsewhen antigen is first
encountered, naïve lymphocytes proliferate to
produce two types of cells effector and memory
cells.
42Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- Effector cells carry out the attack. Effector B
cells (plasma cells) secrete antibodies. Effector
T cells secrete cytokines and other molecules. - Memory cells are long-lived cells that can divide
on short notice to produce effector and more
memory cells. - Memory B and T cells may survive for decades.
43Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- Secondary immune responsewhen antigen is
encountered again, memory cells proliferate and
launch an army of plasma cells and effector T
cells. - Vaccinations trigger a primary immune response to
prepare the body for a quicker, secondary
response, if it encounters the pathogen again.
44Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- The adaptive immune response involves three
phases - Recognition phasethe organism discriminates
between self and nonself to detect a pathogen. - Activation phasethe recognition event leads to a
mobilization of cells and molecules to fight the
invader. - Effector phasethe mobilized cells and molecules
destroy the invader.
45Figure 31.6 The Adaptive Immune System (Part 1)
46Figure 31.6 The Adaptive Immune System (Part 2)
47Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- The three phases can occur in either of two types
of response the humoral immune response and the
cellular immune response. - Humoral immune response involves B cells that
make antibodies. - Cytotoxic T (TC) cells are the workhorses of the
cellular immune response.
48Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- A key event is the exposure or presentation of
the antigen to the immune system. - In humoral immunity, this occurs when an antigen
binds to a B cell that has an antibody specific
to that antigen. - In cellular immunity, an antigen is inserted into
the membrane of an antigen-presenting cell. - The antigen is recognized by a T-helper (TH)
cell, with a specific T cell receptor protein.
49Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- Antigen binding readies a B cell for division.
- Antigen fragments bind to the MHC complex and are
presented on the B cell surface. - A specific TH cell binds and stimulates the B
cell to divide and form a clone. - In the cellular immune response, TH cell binding
to the antigen-presenting cell causes cytokine
release. - Cytokines stimulate TC cells with the same T cell
receptor to divide.
50Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- The result of activation is the formation of two
clones of cells - A clone of B cells that can produce antibodies
specific for the antigen - A clone of TC cells that express a T cell
receptor that can bind to any cell expressing the
antigen on its surface
51Concept 31.3 The Adaptive Immune Response Is
Specific
- In the effector phase, B clone cells produce
antibodies that bind to free antigen results in
inactivation and destruction of the antigen. - TC clone cells bind to cells bearing the antigen
and destroy them.
52Concept 31.4 The Adaptive Humoral Immune Response
Involves Specific Antibodies
- B cells are the basis of the humoral immune
response. - A naïve B cell expresses a receptor protein
specific for an antigen on its cell surface. - The cell is activated by antigen-binding and
after TH cell stimulation will give rise to
clones of plasma and memory cells. - Plasma cells secrete antibodies into the blood
stream.
53Concept 31.4 The Adaptive Humoral Immune Response
Involves Specific Antibodies
- A B cell can also be stimulated to divide by a TH
cell binding to the exposed antigen on the B cell
surface. - The specific TH cell may come from a clone that
was activated by the cellular immune response. - Interaction between B cells and TH cells provides
a connection between the cellular and humoral
systems. - The TH cell bound to the B cell secretes
cytokines that stimulate the B cell to divide.
54Concept 31.4 The Adaptive Humoral Immune Response
Involves Specific Antibodies
- Antibodies, or immunoglobulins, all contain a
tetramer of four polypeptides. - In each molecule are two light chains and two
heavy chains, held together by disulfide bonds. - Each polypeptide chain has a constant region and
a variable region.
55Figure 31.7 The Structure of an Immunoglobulin
(Part 1)
56Figure 31.7 The Structure of an Immunoglobulin
(Part 2)
57Concept 31.4 The Adaptive Humoral Immune Response
Involves Specific Antibodies
- The amino acid sequence of the constant region
determines the general structure and function
(the class) of an immunoglobulin. - The amino acid sequence of the variable region is
different for each specific immunoglobulinrespons
ible for antibody specificity. - Two antigen-binding sites on an immunoglobulin
are identicalbivalent.
58In-Text Art, Ch. 31, p. 630
59Concept 31.4 The Adaptive Humoral Immune Response
Involves Specific Antibodies
- Five classes of immunoglobulins (Ig) differ in
function and in the type of heavy chain - IgG is secreted by B cells and constitutes about
80 percent of circulating antibodies. - IgD is the cell surface receptor on a B cell.
- IgM is the initial surface and circulating
antibody released by a B cell. - IgA protects mucosa on epithelia exposed to the
environment. - IgE binds to mast cells and is involved with
inflammation.
60Concept 31.4 The Adaptive Humoral Immune Response
Involves Specific Antibodies
- Each mature B cell can produce only one specific
antibody with a specific amino acid sequence. - The B cell genome
- Has a number of different coding regions for each
domain of an immunoglobulin - Diversity is generated by putting together
different combinations of these regions.
61Concept 31.4 The Adaptive Humoral Immune Response
Involves Specific Antibodies
- Each gene encoding an immunoglobulin is actually
a supergene assembled from a cluster of smaller
genes. - Every cell has hundreds of immunoglobulin genes
that could participate in synthesis of both
variable and constant regions.
62Figure 31.8 Heavy-Chain Genes
63Concept 31.4 The Adaptive Humoral Immune Response
Involves Specific Antibodies
- During B cell development the genes are cut out
and rearranged. One gene from each cluster is
chosen randomly for joining, others are deleted. - A unique supergene is assembled.
- Resultenormous diversity of specific antibodies.
64Figure 31.9 Heavy-Chain Gene Recombination and
RNA Splicing
65Concept 31.4 The Adaptive Humoral Immune Response
Involves Specific Antibodies
- Each B cell precursor assembles two
supergenesone for the light chain, one for the
heavy chain. - Genes for the light chains are on separate
chromosomes they are made in a similar way, with
an equally large amount of diversity possible.
66Concept 31.4 The Adaptive Humoral Immune Response
Involves Specific Antibodies
- Other mechanisms for diversity
- When DNA is rearranged, errors can occur during
recombination, creating new codonsimprecise
recombination - Before DNA is rejoined, terminal transferase adds
nucleotides, creating insertion mutations - High spontaneous mutation rate
67Concept 31.4 The Adaptive Humoral Immune Response
Involves Specific Antibodies
- Antibodies can act as receptors on the cell
surface. - They can also be secreted from B cells into the
blood - Some bind to the antigen expressed on surface of
a pathogen. - If antigen is free in the bloodstream, antibodies
may use cross-linking function to form large
complexes to be destroyed by phagocytes.
68Concept 31.5 The Adaptive Cellular Immune
Response Involves T Cells and Their Receptors
- Cellular immune response involves two types of
effector T cells - T-helper cells (TH)
- Cytotoxic T cells (TC)
- Major histocompatibility proteins (MHC) proteins
are also involved.
69Concept 31.5 The Adaptive Cellular Immune
Response Involves T Cells and Their Receptors
- T cells have specific membrane receptorsglycoprot
eins, with two polypeptide chains. - Each chain is encoded by a different genehas
distinct regions with constant and variable amino
acid sequences. - T cell receptors can bind a piece or fragment of
an antigen, on the surface of an
antigen-presenting cell.
70Figure 31.10 A T Cell Receptor
71Concept 31.5 The Adaptive Cellular Immune
Response Involves T Cells and Their Receptors
- TH and TC cells respond differently to
antigen-binding. - TH binding results in activation of the cellular
immune response. - TC binding results in the death of the cell
carrying the antigen. - MHC proteins form complexes with antigens on cell
surfaces and assist with recognition by the T
cells, so that the appropriate type of T cell
binds.
72Concept 31.5 The Adaptive Cellular Immune
Response Involves T Cells and Their Receptors
- MHC proteins are plasma membrane glycoproteins.
Two types present antigens to T lymphocytes - Class I MHC proteins are present on the surface
of every nucleated cell. They present antigens to
TC cells. - Class II MHC proteins are on surfaces of
macrophages, B cells, and dendritic cellspresent
antigens to TH cells.
73Figure 31.11 Macrophages Are Antigen-Presenting
Cells
74Concept 31.5 The Adaptive Cellular Immune
Response Involves T Cells and Their Receptors
- People can have very different MHC genotypes due
to many possible combinations of alleles. - MHC proteins are self markers.
- For antigen presentation, MHC I and MHC II
proteins have an antigen binding site, which
holds a polypeptide fragment. - T cell receptor recognizes not just the antigenic
fragment, but the fragment bound to MHC I or II.
75Table 31.2 The Interaction between T Cells and
Antigen-Presenting Cells
76Concept 31.5 The Adaptive Cellular Immune
Response Involves T Cells and Their Receptors
- Activation of a TC cell results in the production
of a clone of TC cells with the specific T cell
receptor. - These TC cells bind to cells carrying the
antigenMHC I protein complex. - When bound, the TC cells do two things to
eliminate the antigen-carrying cell - They produce perforin, which lyses the bound
target cell. - They stimulate apoptosis in the target cell.
77In-Text Art, Ch. 31, p. 634
78Concept 31.5 The Adaptive Cellular Immune
Response Involves T Cells and Their Receptors
- Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are a third class that
regulates the immune response. - Tregs recognize self antigenswhen activated they
release the cytokine interleukin 10. - This blocks T cell activation and leads to
apoptosis of TC and TH cells bound to the same
antigen.
79Figure 31.12 Tregs and Tolerance
80Concept 31.5 The Adaptive Cellular Immune
Response Involves T Cells and Their Receptors
- The importance of Tregs is mediating tolerance to
self antigens. Two lines of evidence for role
of Tregs - If Tregs are destroyed experimentally in the
thymus, the immune system mounts strong responses
to self antigens (autoimmunity). - A mutation in a gene critical to Treg function
results in a disease IPEXcauses fatal immune
responses.
81Concept 31.5 The Adaptive Cellular Immune
Response Involves T Cells and Their Receptors
- Immune deficiency disorders can be inherited or
acquired. - T or B cells may never form, or B cells lose
their ability to give rise to plasma cellsthe
affected individual lacks a major line of defense
against pathogens. - Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)
results from infection by human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV).
82Concept 31.5 The Adaptive Cellular Immune
Response Involves T Cells and Their Receptors
- HIV initially infects TH cells, macrophages, and
antigen-presenting dendritic cells. - At first there is an immune response and TH cells
are activatedbut are later killed by both HIV
and by lysis by TC cells. - Numbers of TH cells decline after infection.
- However, the HIV-infected cells activate the
humoral immune system and symptoms abate.
83Figure 31.13 The Course of an HIV Infection
84Concept 31.5 The Adaptive Cellular Immune
Response Involves T Cells and Their Receptors
- During the dormant period, people with HIV feel
fine. - Eventually more TH cells are destroyed and the
person is susceptible to opportunistic
infections - Kaposis sarcoma, a rare skin cancer caused by a
herpes virus - Pneumonia caused by fungus Pneumocystis jirovecii
- Lymphoma tumors caused by Epstein-Barr virus
85Concept 31.5 The Adaptive Cellular Immune
Response Involves T Cells and Their Receptors
- Drug treatments for HIV are focused on inhibiting
processes necessary for viral entry, assembly,
and replication. - Combinations of such drugs result in long-term
survival. Unfortunately, like many medical
treatments, HIV drugs are not available to all
who need them.
86Answer to Opening Question
Infection is met by the body in one way that
protects it from immediate harm and by another
that produces antibodies to protect against a
future infection. Antibody production is a slower
response, but once in place forms an
immunological memory. Vaccines are an application
of this response.
87Figure 31.14 Vaccination