This document provides an overview of basic concepts in immunology. It discusses that the immune system is comprised of cells, tissues, and molecules that mediate reactions to pathogens and other substances. The immune system has two main functions: to prevent or eradicate infections, and to repair damaged tissues. It is divided into innate immunity, which provides immediate protection, and adaptive immunity, which develops more specialized defenses. The adaptive immune system relies on B cells and T cells that recognize specific antigens and mount memory responses upon reexposure.
This document provides an overview of basic concepts in immunology. It discusses that the immune system is comprised of cells, tissues, and molecules that mediate reactions to pathogens and other substances. The immune system has two main functions: to prevent or eradicate infections, and to repair damaged tissues. It is divided into innate immunity, which provides immediate protection, and adaptive immunity, which develops more specialized defenses. The adaptive immune system relies on B cells and T cells that recognize specific antigens and mount memory responses upon reexposure.
05.03.2024 The collection of cells, tissues, and molecules that mediate these reactions is called the immune system. The coordinated response of these cells and molecules to pathogens and other substances comprises an immune response. The most important physiologic function of the immune system is to prevent or eradicate infections. The immune system also plays a major role in the repair of damaged tissues. Immunology is the study of immune responses in this broader sense and of the cellular and molecular events that occur after an organism encounters microbes and other foreign molecules. The importance of the immune system for health;
Individuals with defective immune responses are susceptible to
serious, often life-threatening infections Vaccination is the most effective method for protecting individuals against infections Worldwide eradication of smallpox The appearance of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in the 1980s Pathogens are agents that cause disease, such as bacteria, viruses, fungi, or others Dedicated cells of the immune system enable animals to avoid or limit many infections First lines of defense help prevent pathogens from gaining entry to the body Within the body, two types of molecular recognition allow detection of nonself molecules, particles, and cells Host defenses are grouped under innate and adaptive immunity. Innate immunity provides immediate protection against microbial invasion All animals have innate immunity Always present in healthy individuals Active defense immediately upon infection
Adaptive immunity, which develops more slowly and
provides more specialized defense against infections. Activated after the innate response Someinnate defenses of mammals are barrier defenses, phagocytosis, and antimicrobial peptides.
Barrier defenses include the skin and mucous membranes
of the respiratory, urinary, and reproductive tracts Mucus traps and allows for the removal of microbes Many body fluids including saliva, mucus, and tears are used against many microbes The low pH of skin and the digestive system prevents growth of many bacteria There are twomain types of phagocytic cells, which engulf and destroy pathogens, in the mammalian body: Neutrophils circulate in the blood
Macrophages migrate through the body or reside
permanently in organs and tissues develop from circulating monocytes live in tissues much longer than neutrophils do also help to repair damaged tissues. There aretwo additional types of phagocytic cells: Dendritic cells stimulate development of adaptive immunity They have specialized function of capturing microbial antigens and displaying them to T lymphocytes to initiate adaptive immune responses and are therefore called antigen-presenting cells (APCs).
Eosinophils discharge destructive enzymes against
parasites Cellular innate defenses also involve natural killer cells These circulate through the body and detect abnormal cells They release chemicals leading to cell death, inhibiting the spread of virally infected or cancerous cells Many cellular innate defenses involve the lymphatic system The inflammatory response, including heat and swelling, is brought about by molecules released upon injury or infection Mast cells, immune cells found in connective tissue, discharge cytokines, signaling molecules that recruit neutrophils to the site They also release histamine, which triggers blood vessels to dilate and become more permeable The resulting increase in blood supply produces the inflammatory response Pathogen recognition in mammals, triggers the production and release of peptides that attack pathogens or impede their reproduction Interferons are proteins that provide innate defense by inhibiting the replication of viruses Some types of interferons help activate macrophages The complement system consists of about 30 proteins in blood plasma These are activated by substances on the surface of many pathogens A resulting cascade of reactions lead to lysis of the invading cells The complement system also functions in the inflammatory response and in adaptive defense Unlike innate immunity, the adaptive response is enhanced by previous exposure to the pathogen The adaptive response relies on two types of lymphocytes, or white blood cells Lymphocytes that mature in the thymus, above the heart, are called T cells, and those that mature in bone marrow are called B cells The cells and molecules of innate immunity recognize structures shared by classes of microbes The lymphocytes of adaptive immunity express receptors that specifically recognize a much wider variety of molecules produced by microbes, as well as noninfectious molecules. Any molecule that is specifically recognized by lymphocytes or antibodies is called an antigen. Adaptive immune responses often use the cells and molecules of the innate immune system to eliminate microbes. For example, antibodies (a component of adaptive immunity) bind to microbes, and these coated microbes bind to and activate phagocytes (a component of innate immunity), which ingest and destroy the microbes. The term immune response generally refers to adaptive immunity. The two types of adaptive immunity
Humoral immunity and cell-mediated
immunity, They are mediated by different cells and molecules and provide defense against extracellular microbes and intracellular microbes, respectively. Secreted antibodies enter the circulation,extracellular tissue fluids, and the lumens of mucosal organs such as the gastrointestinal and respiratory tracts. The antibodies defend against microbes present in these locations by preventing them from invading tissue cells and by neutralizing toxins made by the microbes. Defense against microbes that have already entered host cells is called cell-mediated immunity because it is mediated by cells, which are called T lymphocytes. Cell-mediated immunity is especially important to defend against intracellular organisms that can survive and replicate inside cells. Some T lymphocytes activate phagocytes to destroy microbes that have been ingested and live within intracellular vesicles of these phagocytes. Other T lymphocytes kill any type of host cells (including non-phagocytic cells) that harbor infectious microbes in the cytoplasm or nucleus.
In both cases, the T cells recognize microbial antigens that
are displayed on host cell surfaces, which indicates there is a microbe inside the cell. Immunity may be induced in an individual by infection or vaccination (active immunity) or conferred on an individual by transfer of antibodies or lymphocytes from an actively immunized individual (passive immunity). In active immunity, an individual exposed to the antigens of a microbe mounts a response to eradicate the infection and develops resistance to later infection by that microbe. In passive immunity, a naive individual receives antibodies or cells (e.g., lymphocytes) from another individual already immune to an infection or protective antibodies that have been synthesized using modern bioengineering techniques. Specificity and Diversity
The adaptive immune system is capable of distinguishing
millions of different antigens or portions of antigens, a feature that is referred to as specificity. Total collection of lymphocyte specificities, sometimes called the lymphocyte repertoire, is extremely diverse. The total population of B and T lymphocytes consists of many different clones. The clonal selection hypothesis, formulated in the 1950s
Clones oflymphocytes specific for different antigens
develop before an encounter with these antigens, and each antigen elicits an immune response by selecting and activating the lymphocytes of a specific clone. Memory
The adaptive immune system mounts faster, larger and
more effective responses to repeated exposure to the same antigen.
This feature ofadaptive immune responses implies that the
immune system remembers every encounter with antigen, and this property of adaptive immunity is called immunologic memory. Clonal expansion
When naive or memory lymphocytes are activated by antigens,
they undergo proliferation, generating many thousands of cells, all with the same antigen receptors and specificity.
This process, called
clonal expansion, rapidly increases the number of cells specific for antigen encountered and ensures that adaptive immunity keeps pace with rapidly proliferating microbes. Lymphocytes
Lymphocytes are the only cells that produce clonally distributed
receptors specific for diverse antigens and are the key mediators of adaptive immunity. Although all lymphocytes are morphologically similar and rather unremarkable in appearance, they are heterogeneous in lineage, function, and phenotype and are capable of complex biologic responses and activities. These cells often are distinguished by the expression of surface proteins that may be identified using panels of monoclonal antibodies.
The standard nomenclature for these proteins is the CD (cluster
of differentiation) numeric designation, which is used to delineate surface proteins that define a particular cell type or stage of cell differentiation and that are recognized by a cluster or group of antibodies. CD4+ helper T lymphocytes CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes All lymphocytes arise from common lymphoid precursor cells in the bone marrow. Lymphocytes mature in the bone marrow, and T lymphocytes mature in an organ called the thymus. These sites in which mature lymphocytes are produced are called the generative (or central) lymphoid organs.
Mature lymphocytes leave the generative lymphoid organs and
enter the circulation and peripheral (secondary) lymphoid organs, which are the major site of immune responses where lymphocytes encounter antigens and are activated. When naive lymphocytes recognize microbial antigens and also receive additional signals induced by microbes, the antigen- specific lymphocytes proliferate and then differentiate into effector cells and memory cells. Naive lymphocytes express receptors for antigens but do not perform the functions that are required to eliminate antigens. These cells reside in and circulate between peripheral lymphoid organs and survive for several months up to a few years, waiting to find and respond to antigen. If they are not activated by antigen, naive lymphocytes die by the process of apoptosis. The differentiation ofnaive lymphocytes into effector cells and memory cells is initiated by antigen recognition.
Effector lymphocytes are the differentiated progeny of naive
cells that have the ability to produce molecules that function to eliminate antigens. The effector cells in the B lymphocyte lineage are antibody- secreting cells, called plasma cells. The common portals of entry for microbes—the skin and gastrointestinal, respiratory, and genitourinary tracts— contain specialized cells located in the epithelium that capture antigens, transport them to peripheral lymphoid tissues, and display (present) them to lymphocytes.
These are the
first steps in the development of adaptive immune responses against antigens. Thisfunction of antigen capture and presentation is best understood for dendritic cells, the most specialized antigen-presenting cells (APCs) in the immune system.
Dendritic cells capture protein antigens ofmicrobes that
cross epithelial barriers and transport these antigens to regional lymph nodes, where they display fragments of the proteins for recognition by T lymphocytes. The generative lymphoid organs, in which T and B lymphocytes mature and become competent to respond to antigens The peripheral lymphoid organs, in which adaptive immune responses to microbes are initiated. Most of the lymphocytes in a healthy human are found in lymphoid organs and other tissues. Lymph nodes are encapsulated nodular aggregates of lymphoid tissues located along lymphatic channels throughout the body. Fluid constantly leaks out of small blood vessels in all epithelia and connective tissues and most parenchymal organs. This fluid, called lymph, is drained by lymphatic vessels from the tissues to the lymph nodes and eventually back into the blood circulation. The spleen is a highly vascularized abdominal organ that serves the same role in immune responses to blood-borne antigens as that of lymph nodes in responses to lymph-borne antigens. Blood entering the spleen flows through a network of channels (sinusoids). Blood-borne antigens are captured and concentrated by dendritic cells and macrophages in the spleen. The spleen contains abundant phagocytes that line the sinusoids, which ingest and destroy microbes in the blood. These macrophages also ingest and destroy old red blood cells.