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Adaptive Immunity: Specific Defenses of the Host

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Title: Adaptive Immunity: Specific Defenses of the Host


1
Adaptive Immunity Specific Defenses of the Host
  • Chapter 17 Tortora

2
Immunity
  • Protection against disease (etc)
  • The immune system recognizes foreign substances
    and develops an immune response against them.
  • Innate or nonspecific immunity seems to have an
    inherited (genetic) component
  • Adaptive or specific immunity adapts to a
    particular invader or foreign substance

3
Types of acquired immunity
  • Acquired immunity can be acquired passively or
    actively
  • Active or passive can be acquired naturally or
    artificially
  • Naturally acquired active immunity-exposure to
    antigens (you get sick and recover)
  • Naturally acquired passive immunity-natural
    transfer of antibodies from mom to child (breast
    feeding and in utero)-this is short lived.

4
Immunity continued
  • Artificially acquired active-get a vaccination
    which introduces specially prepared antigens into
    the body
  • Doesnt cause disease but stimulates your
    reaction
  • Artificially acquired passive-introduce
    antibodies into the body
  • These are derived from serum so are called
    antisera
  • Often inject a horse with antigen and then use
    the horse antibody (spider and snake antivenom)

5
Dual nature of the immune system
  • First Nobel prize winner was Emil von Behring who
    discovered immunity can be passed from one
    organism to another (now called humoral immunity)
  • Scientists later discovered this was due to
    antibodies (1930s)
  • Cell mediated immunity is governed by lymphocytes
  • Humoral immunity (antibody mediated) involves the
    production of antibody

6
Humoral immunity
  • B cells or B lymphocytes are responsible for
    antibody production
  • This provides resistance to bacteria and viruses
    and bacterial toxins
  • B stands for the Bursae of Fabricius
  • Antibody or immunoglobulins recognize different
    types of antigen

7
Cell mediated Immunity
  • Involves T cells (T lymphocytes) that act against
    foreign cells or tissue
  • T cells mature in the thymus gland
  • Also regulate the activation and proliferation of
    other immune system cells
  • Cell mediated immune response is directed against
    bacteria and viruses inside phagocytic cells or
    infected host cells, fungi, protozoa, and
    helminths
  • This also causes rejection in implanted tissue

8
Antigens and antibody
  • Antigen is any foreign substance
  • We recognize self and dont attack it (MHC
    antigen)
  • Antibody is produced by B cells and combines with
    antigenic determinant or epitopes on the antigen
  • Some antigens are small (a molecular weight of
    less than 10,000) and wont trigger a response
    unless attached to a carrier. These small
    antigens are HAPTENS.
  • The antibody reacts with the hapten, not the
    carrier.

9
Nature of antibody
  • Antibodies are proteins made in response to
    antigen that recognize and bind to antigen
  • The valence of an antibody is the number of
    antigen binding sites
  • Most humans are bivalent
  • Antibodies are members of a group of soluble
    proteins called immunoglobulins or Igs.

10
Antibody structure
  • A bivalent is the simplest structure for an
    antibody so it is referred to as a monomer
  • A monomer usually has 4 protein chains
  • Two of these are identical light chains (L) and
    two are identical heavy chains (H)
  • Light and heavy refer to molecular weights

http//courses.washington.edu/conj/immune/antibody
.htm Citation for picture
11
Antibody structure continued
  • Variable regions (V) are located at the end of
    the Ys arms
  • Their structure reflects the specific antigen
    they recognize, and these are specific to the two
    antigen binding sites (bind to epitopes)
  • The stem and lower portion of the Y are the
    constant regions (C)
  • These are the same for a particular class of Ig
  • There are 5 major types of C regions, giving us 5
    major classes of immunoglobulin
  • The Fc regions (on the stem) are important in
    immunological reactions

12
Classes of Ig
  • IgG-80 of all serum antibody, cross blood vessel
    walls and enter tissue fluids
  • Cross placenta to protect fetus
  • Protect against circulating bacteria, viruses,
    neutralize toxin, trigger complement, and enhance
    phagocytic cells
  • IgM 5-10 of serum antibody and is shaped like a
    pentamer
  • First to respond to initial antigen exposure.
    Subsequent exposure results in increased IgG
  • Valuable in diagnosis because it is early to
    respond.

13
Classes continued
  • IgA-5-10 of serum antibody, but most common in
    fluids like saliva and breast milk (helps keep
    baby safe while it develops its own immune
    system)
  • Prevent attachment of viruses and/or bacteria to
    mucosal surfaces
  • IgD-0.2, found on surface of B cells and act as
    antigen receptors (no known function in serum)
  • IgE-0.002 of serum antibody, Fc portion binds to
    mast cells and basophils (allergic reactions),
  • Increases during parasite or allergy

14
B cells and Humoral immunity
  • This antibody mediated immunity is carried out by
    B cells
  • HOW?
  • B cell exposed to antigen and become activated
  • B cells divide and produce clones called plasma
    cells
  • Plasma cells produce antibody to that specific
    antigen (say you have measles for instance, it
    wont work against chicken pox)
  • Some turn into memory cells so that you can have
    long term immunity to that disease.

15
More on B cells
  • B cells come from stem cells in bone marrow
    (adult) and liver (fetus)
  • Mature B cells are found in spleen and lymph
    nodes
  • Recognize antigen by antigen receptors on cell
    surface
  • Apoptosis-programmed cell death
  • We make 100 million lymphocytes a day, so equal
    number must die. Any that dont encounter
    antigen quickly go through apoptosis

16
Activation of antibody producing clones
  • Each B cell can only produce an antibody against
    a particular antigen
  • A mature B cell can have 100,000 IgM or IgD
    antibody bound to its surface
  • When antigen binds to antigen receptor, the B
    cell proliferates into clones that will recognize
    this one antigen (clonal selection)
  • Each B cell has the ability to respond to 100
    million antigens thanks to the variable region,
    but once it has responded it can only make clones
    for ONE type.

17
Antigen/antibody complex
  • B cells usually require the help of a helper T
    cell
  • An antigen that requires the helper T cells for
    antibody production is called a T-dependent
    antigen
  • B cell contacts the antigen and is processed
    inside the B cell
  • Fragments of the antigen combine with MHC and are
    displayed on the B cell surface.
  • The T cell comes in contact with the antigenic
    fragment/MHC presented on the B cell and
    activates the T cell
  • The T cell produces cytokines that in turn
    activate the B cell to produce clones, some of
    which become the plasma cell.

18
Antigen-antibody binding and results
  • Antigen/antibody complex is formed quickly
  • Binding targets the antigen for phagocytosis or
    complement
  • Agglutination is clumping of antigens to make
    them easier for phagocytes to digest
  • Neutralization-IgG antibodies inactivate viruses
    by blocking their attachment to a host
  • Opsonization-antigen is covered by antibody to
    aid in ingestion/digestion by phagocytic cells
  • IgG and IgM trigger complement

19
T cells and Cell mediated Immunity
  • The chemical messengers of immune cells are
    called cytokines
  • These chemical messengers allow the cells to
    communicate with each other
  • There are 60 different cytokines identified to
    date
  • Some cytokines help the communication between
    leukocytes and are called interleukins
  • There are 18 of these (IL-1, IL-2 etc) (see table
    17.3)
  • Another group is called chemokines that help
    induce leukocytes to migrate into infected areas.

20
Cellular components of immunity
  • T cells are the key component
  • They develop from stem cells in bone marrow and
    mature in the thymus gland
  • After maturation they migrate to lymphoid organs
  • T cells respond to specific antigen, multiply as
    clones into effector T cells, and destroy the
    invader

21
Types of T cells
  • Helper T-have central role in immune response,
    these activate macrophages and help form
    cytotoxic T cells
  • Cytotoxic T destroy target cells on contact by
    producing perforin that lysis a bacterial or
    viral infected cells
  • Delayed hypersensitivity T involved in allergic
    reactions and tissue rejection,
  • Suppressor T are involved in stopping the
    reaction once the danger is passed. (Now called
    regulatory T cells).
  • Another way to classify T cells is by the type of
    surface receptor called CD (clusters of
    differentiation)
  • Two are CD4 and CD8.

22
Nonspecific cellular components
  • Natural killer cells or NK cells -lymphocytes
    that can destroy other cells, especially tumor
    cells and other viral infected cells
  • Activated macrophages are stimulated macrophages
    that have been activated by the cytokines
    produced by helper T cells
  • These macrophages can be activated by digesting
    antigen too.
  • Macrophages often act as antigen presenting cells
    (APCs)
  • This is identified by the T cells

23
Interrelationship between cell mediated and
humoral immunity
  • Antibody production depends on macrophages and T
    cells (T dependent antigen)
  • 1. antigen is ingested and presented by the APC
  • 2. The helper T cells reacts with this
    MHC-antigen complex
  • 3. This activates the T cell and it begins to
    proliferate and produce cytokines.
  • 4. The cytokines activate macrophages, CD8 cells,
    and natural killer cells

24
continued
  • 5. IL-2 influences a B cell to differentiate into
    a plasma cell that produces antibody
  • Sometimes antigen can stimulate B cells directly
    without the help of T cells. This is called T
    independent antigen
  • In this case the antigen reacts directly with the
    B cell receptors.
  • This is usually weaker

25
Immunological memory
  • Intensity of the antibody mediated humoral
    response is reflected by antibody titer
  • This is the amount of antibody in the serum after
    infection has been cleared
  • There is no detectable titer in the serum for 4-7
    days (initial infection)
  • IgG peaks in 10-17 days, and titer increases
  • This is the primary response
  • If you are exposed again, the memory response
    peaks in 2-7 days and is much greater!

26
When the immune system goes haywire!
  • Hypersensitivity-antigenic response beyond the
    normal response due to previous exposure
    (sensitization) by an allergen
  • 4 types
  • Type I-anaphylatic reactions
  • Type II cytotoxic reactions
  • Type III-Immune complex reactions
  • Type IV-delayed cell mediated (delayed
    hypersensitivity)
  • http//www.cehs.siu.edu/fix/medmicro/hyper.htm

27
Type I
  • Occur quickly (2-30 minutes) after exposure
  • May be localized or systemic
  • Localized reactions include hives, hay fever,
    asthma
  • Systemic includes shock and breathing difficulty
    (death can result)
  • Over reactive IgE ( you inherit the sensitivity
    but may have a completely different allergy)

28
Type II
  • Involve activation of complement by IgG or IgM
    antibodies within an antigenic cell
  • This causes lysis of the cell
  • Common type II reactions are transfusion
    reactions (ABO blood group)
  • Erthryoblastosis fetalis or hemolytic disease of
    the newborn (Rh negative mom has a second Rh
    positive baby, the second baby is likely to
    develop this)

29
Type III
  • Form when certain ratios of antigen and antibody
    occur
  • Usually involves IgG
  • IF there is a slight excess of antigen, the
    soluble complex that forms is small and escape
    phagocytosis
  • It this happens the complex may become trapped in
    the basement membrane beneath cells, activating
    complement and inflammation
  • Neutrophils enter and release enzymes that can
    damage the cells within 2-8 hours.
  • An example is glomerulonephritis which damages
    kidney glomeruli causing kidney failure
  • Another is serum sickness following injection of
    antitoxin produced by an animal

30
Type IV
  • Caused by T cells
  • Delay may be a day or more
  • Include allergic contact dermatitis (allergic to
    latex)
  • T B tine test
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