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Chapter 37 Immunity Sections 7-12

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Title: Chapter 37 Immunity Sections 7-12


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Chapter 37ImmunitySections 7-12
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37.7 Overview of Adaptive Immunity
  • Vertebrate adaptive immunity adapts to different
    antigens an individual encounters during its
    lifetime
  • Lymphocytes and phagocytes interact to effect
    four defining characteristics self/nonself
    recognition, specificity, diversity, and memory

3
4 Characteristics of Adaptive Immune Responses
  • Self/Nonself recognition is based on the ability
    of T cell receptors to recognize self (MHC)
    markers TCRs and other antigen receptors
    recognize nonself, in the form of antigen
  • Specificity means the adaptive immune response
    can be tailored to combat specific antigens

4
4 Characteristics of Adaptive Immune Responses
  • Diversity refers to the billions of different
    antigen receptors that a persons B and T cells
    can make
  • Memory refers to the capacity of the adaptive
    immune system to remember an antigen the
    second time an antigen shows up, the response is
    faster and stronger

5
Two Arms of Adaptive Immunity
  • Antibody-mediated immune response
  • B cells produce antibodies that bind to specific
    antigen particles in blood or interstitial fluid
  • Cell-mediated immune response
  • Cytotoxic T cells and NK cells detect and destroy
    infected or altered body cells

6
Antigen Processing
  • Once a B or T cell recognizes and binds to a
    specific antigen, it begins to divide by mitosis
  • All descendent cells recognize the same antigen
  • T cells do not recognize an antigen unless it is
    presented by an antigen-presenting cell
  • Macrophages, B cells, and dendritic cells digest
    particles and display antigen-MHC complexes

7
Antigen Processing
1
7
2
6
5
lysosome
3
4
MHC molecule
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Intercepting Antigen
  • A dendritic cell or macrophage migrates to a
    lymph node, where it presents antigen to T cells
  • The T cell secretes cytokines, which signal other
    B or T cells with the same antigen receptor to
    divide and differentiate
  • Effector cells are differentiated B and T cells
    that act at once to fight infection
  • Memory cells are long-lived B and T cells
    reserved for future encounters with the same
    antigen

9
Clearing Out Antigen
  • Effector cells destroy most antigen-bearing
    agents
  • Antibodyantigen complexes form large clumps that
    are quickly cleared from the blood by the liver
    and spleen
  • Complement proteins assist in the cleanup

10
memory cells
memory cells
B or T cell
effector cells
effector cells
primary immune response
secondary immune response
second exposure
first exposure
Figure 37-15 p661
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Take-Home MessageWhat is the adaptive immune
system?
  • Phagocytes and lymphocytes interact to bring
    about vertebrate adaptive immunity, which has
    four defining characteristics self/nonself
    recognition, specificity, diversity, and memory.
  • The two arms of adaptive immunity work together.
    Antibody-mediated responses target antigen in
    blood or interstitial fluid cell-mediated
    responses target altered body cells.

12
37.8 The Antibody-Mediated Immune Response
  • Antibody-mediated immune response
  • Antigen activates naïve B cells and dendritic
    cells
  • Naïve T cell binds to APC and differentiates into
    effector and memory helper T cells
  • Helper T cells bind antigen-MHC complexes on
    activated B cell and secrete cytokines
  • B cell differentiates into effector B cells,
    which produce antibodies, and memory B cells

13
Stepped Art
Figure 37-16a p662
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Antibody Action
  • Circulating antibodies attach themselves to
    pathogens
  • An antibody coating prevents bacteria from
    attaching to body cells and brings them to the
    attention of phagocytic cells
  • Antibodies also cause agglutination of foreign
    cells clumps are removed from the circulatory
    system by the spleen
  • Antibodies also initiate a complement cascade in
    innate immune responses

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Lymphocyte Activity in a Lymph Node
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Clonal Selection
  • Only B and T cells with receptors that bind
    antigen divide (clone) and differentiate into
    effector and memory cells
  • Primary response produces memory B and T cells
    secondary response is stronger and faster

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antigen
Antigen binds only to a matching B cell receptor.
mitosis
clonal population of effector B cells
Many effector B cells secrete many antibodies.
Figure 37-18 p663
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Take-Home Message What happens during an
antibody-mediated immune response?
  • T cells, B cells, and antigen-presenting cells
    carry out an antibody-mediated immune response.
  • Effector B cells that form during an
    antibody-mediated immune response make and
    secrete antibodies that recognize and bind
    antigen-bearing particles in blood or tissue
    fluids. Antibody binding can neutralize a
    pathogen or toxin and facilitate its elimination
    from the body.
  • Memory cells also form, and these are reserved
    for a potential future encounter with the antigen.

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37.9 The Cell-Mediated Response
  • Cell-mediated immune response
  • Dendritic cell ingests altered body cell,
    displays antigen-MHC complexes, and migrates to
    lymph node
  • Naïve helper T and cytotoxic T cells bind to APC
  • Activated helper T divides and differentiates
    into memory and effector cells cytokines signal
    division of activated cytotoxic T cells
  • Cytotoxic T cells circulate and touch-kill
    altered body cells

20
Stepped Art
Figure 37-19a p664
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APC and T Cell
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TCR Binding
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Antigen/TCR/ MHC Complex
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Cytotoxic T Cells
  • Cytotoxic T cells kill body cells displaying
    antigen-MHC markers including cancer cells that
    display altered body proteins, and body cells
    infected with intracellular pathogens
  • T cell releases protein-digesting enzymes and
    perforins
  • Perforins assemble into complexes that insert
    themselves into a plasma membrane as a
    transmembrane channel enzymes enter the cell and
    induce it to commit suicide

25
Natural Killer Cells
  • Cytokines secreted by helper T cells also
    stimulate natural killer (NK) cell division
  • Unlike cytotoxic T cells, NK cells can kill
    infected cells that are missing all or part of
    their MHC markers

26
Take-Home Message What happens during a
cell-mediated immune response?
  • T cells, NK cells, and antigen-presenting cells
    carry out a cell-mediated immune response.
  • Effector cytotoxic T cells and NK cells that form
    during a cell-mediated immune response kill
    infected body cells or those that have been
    altered by cancer.
  • Memory cells also form, and these are reserved
    for a potential future encounter with the antigen.

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37.10 When Immunity Goes Wrong
  • An allergy is an immune response to something
    that is ordinarily harmless to most people
  • Autoimmune disorders occur when an immune
    response is misdirected against a persons own
    healthy body cells
  • In immunodeficiency, the immune response is
    insufficient to protect a person from disease

28
Allergies
  • Allergy
  • An immune response to a typically harmless
    substance (allergen)
  • First exposure stimulates production of IgE,
    which becomes anchored to mast cells and
    basophils
  • Later exposure stimulates secretion of histamine
    and cytokines that initiate inflammation

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Allergies Hives
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Allergies Hay Fever
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Overly Vigorous Responses
  • Acute illnesses arise when mechanisms that limit
    immune responses fail
  • Severe episodes of asthma or septic shock occur
    when too many neutrophils degranulate at once
  • Anaphylactic shock is a severe and potentially
    fatal allergic reaction

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Anaphylactic Shock
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Autoimmune Disorders
  • Sometimes lymphocytes and antibodies fail to
    discriminate between self and nonself
  • Autoimmune response is an immune response that is
    misdirected against the persons own tissues
  • Autoimmune diseases include rheumatoid arthritis,
    Graves disease, and multiple sclerosis

34
Table 37-4 p667
35
Immunodeficiency
  • In immunodeficiency, the immune response is
    insufficient to protect a person from disease
  • Primary immune deficiencies such as SCIDs and ADA
    are present at birth
  • Secondary immune deficiency such as AIDS results
    from exposure to an outside agent, such as a virus

36
Take-Home Message What happens when the immune
system does not function properly?
  • Normally harmless substances may induce an immune
    response in some people. Sensitivity to such
    allergens is called an allergy.
  • Misdirected or compromised immunity, which
    sometimes occurs as a result of mutation or
    environmental factors, can have severe or lethal
    outcomes.

37
37.11 HIV and AIDS
  • Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)
  • A group of disorders resulting from a failure of
    the immune system due to HIV infection
  • Includes rare cancers and infections caused by
    normally harmless microorganisms
  • Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
  • A retrovirus that attacks specific cells of the
    immune system, including helper T cells

38
Table 37-5 p669
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Symptoms
  • Early symptoms include fever, enlarged lymph
    nodes, chronic fatigue and weight loss, and
    drenching night sweats
  • AIDS results in infections caused by normally
    harmless microorganisms, and cancers such as
    Kaposis sarcoma

40
Transmission of HIV through Mothers Milk
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Kaposis Sarcoma
42
HIV Revisited
  • HIV is a retrovirus with a lipid envelope
    consisting of a small piece of the hosts plasma
    membrane
  • Viral proteins enclose two RNA strands and
    reverse transcriptase enzymes
  • Reverse transcriptase copies viral RNA into DNA,
    which becomes integrated into the host cells DNA
  • The host then begins to produce viral proteins

43
Cellular Struggle
  • HIV infects macrophages, dendritic cells, and
    helper T cells
  • For years or decades, IgG antibodies keep the
    level of HIV in the blood low, and cytotoxic T
    cells kill HIV-infected cells
  • Eventually the immune system becomes less
    effective at fighting the virus, and HIV
    demolishes the immune system
  • Secondary infections and tumors kill the patient

44
Infected T Cell with Budding HIV Virus
45
Transmission and Testing
  • Common modes of HIV transmission include
    unprotected sex, mother to child, and shared
    syringes
  • Most AIDS tests check blood, saliva, or urine for
    antibodies that bind to HIV antigens
  • One test can detect viral RNA at about eleven
    days after exposure
  • Home test kits are not reliable

46
Treatments
  • Drugs
  • There is no cure protease inhibitors and reverse
    transcriptase inhibitors can slow its progress
  • Education
  • The best option for preventing the spread of HIV
    is teaching people how to avoid being infected

47
Take-Home MessageWhat is AIDS?
  • AIDS is a secondary immune deficiency caused by
    HIV infection.
  • HIV infects lymphocytes and so cripples the human
    immune system.

48
Video Vaccinating Against Cancer
49
37.12 Vaccines
  • Immunization
  • The administration of an antigen-bearing vaccine
    designed to elicit immunity to a specific disease
  • Vaccine (active immunization)
  • A preparation containing an antigen that elicits
    a primary immune response
  • Passive immunization
  • Administration of antibodies no immune response

50
The First Vaccine
  • Benjamin Jesty showed that people deliberately
    infected with cow pox became immune to the more
    deadly smallpox
  • In 1796, Edward Jenner used cowpox to created the
    first vaccine against smallpox
  • The vaccine has now eradicated smallpox

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A Case of Smallpox
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Table 37-6 p670
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Progress on an HIV Vaccine
  • HIV vaccines are notoriously ineffective because
    the HIV virus has a very high mutation rate
  • One promising strategy involves reverse
    engineering HIV antibodies isolated from people
    with AIDS
  • Genes encoding effective antibodies are also
    being inserted into viral vectors for use in gene
    therapy

54
Take-Home MessageHow do vaccines work?
  • Immunity to many diseases can be elicited by
    administering antigen-bearing vaccines, a process
    called immunization

55
Video Restarting the Immune System
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