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Immunity: Natural Defence Barriers

The document discusses the immune system and immunity. It describes the physical, mechanical, chemical, and biological barriers that constitute the first line of defense against pathogens. The second line of defense involves internal barriers and non-specific responses like phagocytosis. The third line uses antigen-antibody complexes and specific immune responses. It then discusses the components of the immune response, including antigens, antibodies, and lymphocytes. It outlines the differences between humoral and cell-mediated immune responses and different types of immunity and vaccination.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
89 views

Immunity: Natural Defence Barriers

The document discusses the immune system and immunity. It describes the physical, mechanical, chemical, and biological barriers that constitute the first line of defense against pathogens. The second line of defense involves internal barriers and non-specific responses like phagocytosis. The third line uses antigen-antibody complexes and specific immune responses. It then discusses the components of the immune response, including antigens, antibodies, and lymphocytes. It outlines the differences between humoral and cell-mediated immune responses and different types of immunity and vaccination.

Uploaded by

skarun1
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Immunity

Natural defence barriers

- Physical
o Skin – Prevents entry of pathogens
- Tough, outer layer of dead cells contains keratin
o Secretes:
- TEARS – Secreted by lachrymal glands – Wash away microbes
- Sebum – Secreted by sebaceous glands containing fatty acids –
Antimicrobial action
- Mucus – Sticky secretion produced by goblet cells – Traps
airborne pathogens
- Mechanical
o Nasal hairs – Filter air drawn into nasal passages
o Cilia – Tiny hairs that beat with wave-like motion
- Chemical
o Lysozyme – Enzyme catalysing hydrolysis of molecules in cell walls of
bacteria
o Sweat – Contains lactate – Slows bacterial growth
o Hydrochloric acid – Kills most microorganisms
o Commensals – Parasitic organisms which don’t harm host – Convert
carbohydrate to lactate – Kills pathogenic bacteria – Found in vagina,
skin and large intestine
- Biological
o Harmless bacteria

Lines of defence

- First line
o External barriers
- Second line
o Internal barriers
o Non-specific  Phagocytosis by macrophages
- Membrane invaginates so that
macrophage can engulf bacteria 
Binds with lysosome
- Third line
o Antigen-antibody complex
o Specific

Immune response

- Antigens
o Substance triggering formation of antibodies
o Self
- Found in cell surface membrane in body cells
- Do not activate immune response - Bodies recognise them as part
of us
o Non-self
- Found on cell walls and membranes of bacteria, viruses, fungi,
animal parasites, pollen, incompatible blood cells
- Produce an immune response- Bodies recognise them as foreign
material
- Antibodies
o Immunoglobins
o Glycoprotein produced by lymphocytes - Presence of a specific antigen -
Combines with antigen to neutralise, inhibit or destroy it
o Structure:
- Y-shaped molecule
- Heavy chains and light polypeptide chains
• Held by disulphide bridges
- Two identical antigen binding sites
• Variable region
o Function:
- Neutralisation
• Antibodies block sites on bacteria and viruses
• Antitoxins produced to neutralise toxins from bacteria and
viruses
- Agglutination
• Antibodies bind with antigens
• Stick together
• More antibodies attack antigen  Large clumps of antigen-
antibody complexes formed
- Opsinisation
• Antibodies facilitate with phagocytosis of pathogens
o Blood typing
- Antibodies used to find and destroy foreign cells
- Bind tightly  Antigen-antibody complexes – Different types of
blood cells identified
- Determined used antibodies specifically reacting with proteins
- Looking for agglutination
LYMPHOCYTES

B-lymphocytes T-lymphocytes
- Made by stem cells in bone marrow - Made by stem cells in bone marrow
- Mature in lymph nodes and spleen - Mature in thymus gland
- Divide Plasma B – Secrete - Divide to Cytotoxic T – Destroy
to antibodies into circulation. produce: antigen directly. Attaches
produce: Each antibody specific to to them and releases
antigen. Lives 4 to 5 days chemical perforin to kill
them
Helper T – Attract and
stimulate macrophages.
Promote activity of other
T- and B-lymphocytes.
Increase antibody
production
Memory B – Programmed to Memory T – Multiply very
remember specific antigen. fast in second invasion of
Respond very rapidly to any antigen occurs. Produces
following infection bigger clone of T-
lymphocytes
Dividing B – Produce more B- Suppressor T – Slow
lymphocyte cells down vigorous response
of T-cytotoxic and T-
helper. Slows down
immune response

TYPES OF IMMUNE RESPONSES

Humoral or antibody-mediated response


1. First exposure of antigen engulfed by antigen presenting cell (APC)
2. Invading bacteria enter body
3. Bacteria detected by B-lymphocytes
a. Surface protein receptors matching shape of bacterial antigens
b. B-lymph binds to antigen
4. B-lymphocyte triggered to differentiate and divide by mitosis
a. Plasma B-cells
b. Memory B-cells
5. Plasma cells secrete large quantities of one type of antibody  Circulate blood
6. Antibodies attach to antigen  Antibody-antigen complexes
7. Destruction of bacterium:
a. Precipitation and agglutination  Easier for phagocytes to destroy
b. Antibodies cause lysis  Rupturing of cell walls of bacteria
8. Plasma cells die – Antibodies remain in blood for small amounts of time –
Memory cells stay in blood for years or even for life

Cell-mediated response
1. APC engulfs antigen
2. Infection of body cells with virus causes surface antigens to be present
3. Correct T-lymphocyte recognises antigen
a. Due to match in shape
b. T-lymphocytes binds to antigen
4. T-lymphocyte triggered to divide by mitosis
a. Memory T-cell
b. Helper T-cell
c. Cytotoxic (killer) T-cell
5. Cytotoxic-T are specific to infected cell’s antigen
a. Circulate in body
b. Attach to antigens of infected cells
c. Kill the cells
6. Memory-T cells remain in blood for long time
a. Multiply rapidly in second invasion of antigen

TYPE OF IMMUNITY MAIN FEATURES


Natural active - Lymphocytes activated by antigens - Present on the
immunity surface of the pathogen
- Takes place during the natural course of an infection.
Examples : Chickenpox
Artificial active - Antigens injected into the body
immunity - Lymphocytes activate
- Doesn’t take place through natural course
- Attenuated, inactivated or dead pathogens are vaccinated
E.g. MMR, Tetanus, Diphtheria.
Natural passive - Pre-formed antibodies from mother to baby across the
immunity placenta and colostrum (first secretion of mammary gland)
- Passive - Baby not forming own antibodies - Still provides
the baby with protection
E.g. Maternal antibodies through placenta, Immunoglobulin A in
breast milk protects from bacterial infections.
Artificial passive - Pre-formed antibodies extracted from individual and
immunity injected into another as serum
- Short-term immunity - Injected antibody possess non-self
antigens – Causes body to produce antibodies against it
E.g. Normally used in immunodeficiency diseases, acute infection
and to treat poisoning.

VACCINATION

- Vaccine – Antigen injected or swallowed – Causing development of active


immunity
- Long term – Able to produce memory cells

Most vaccines contain one of the following:

- Killed virulent organisms


o Microbe killed by heat or chemicals
o Dead pathogens possess antigenic sites
 Recognised by T- and B-lymphocytes  Produces antibodies
o E.g. Whooping cough bacteria
- Live non-virulent strains
o Pathogen weakened – Ensure it doesn’t cause severe infection
o E.g. Rubella vaccines, BCG and Sabin vaccine
- Modified toxins
o Toxoids produced by bacteria made harmless
o Stimulate antibody production
o NO risk of infection by pathogen
o E.g. Vaccine against diphtheria and tetanus
- Isolated antigens
o Antigens separated from microbes
o E.g. flu vaccines – Contains mixture of antigens from various strains of
influenza
o Antigenic variation – Occur in microorganisms with high mutation rate
- Genetically engineered antigens
o Restriction endonucleases - Extract genes coding for particular antigen
from pathogen
o Inserted into harmless plasmid vector
o Cells replicate to produce large amounts of antigen

PRIMARY AND SECONDARY IMMUNE RESPONSES

Primary response
- Triggered by body’s
first contact with
antigen
- B-lymphocytes divide
to form plasma cells
 Produce antibodies

Secondary response:
- Triggered by
subsequent contact
with same antigen
previously caused
- B memory specific to antigen present  Activated by antigen
o Stimulate plasma B to produce antibodies

Primary response Secondary response


- Slower to start – Greater delay - Quicker to start – Immediate
response
- Maximum antibody production - Maximum antibody production
is less is greater
- Lasts in blood for shorter time - Lasts in blood for longer time

AIDS

AIDS – Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome


HIV – Human Immunodeficiency Virus
- Destroys helper T-cells
- Retrovirus – Uses RNA to produce single strand of “copy DNA”
- Enzyme reverse transcriptase catalyses reverse transcription of DNA from RNA
- Virus can remain latent for many years before activated
- 3 STAGES:
1. HIV positive – Little or no symptoms
2. Low helper T-cell count
3. Clinical AIDS with symptoms – E.g. cancer, weight loss, fever,
deteriorating brain function

Replication of HIV
2. Binding and fusion:
a. Glycoprotein on outer surface of virus attaches to receptors on host
cell
b. Lipid bilayer of virus fuses with host cell’s membrane - Virus enters
the host cell
4. Reverse transcription:
a. Stimulates cell to make copy DNA from viral RNA template
5. Integration:
a. Viral DNA insert into host cell’s chromosomes
6. Transcription:
a. Viral DNA codes for production of thousands of
new viruses

OPPORTUNISTIC INFECTIONS:
- An infection caused by pathogens
o Usually doesn’t cause disease in healthy host (with healthy immune
system)
o Weakened immune system presents “opportunity” for pathogen to
infect

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