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Chapter 35: Immune System & Disease. Ms. Luaces Honors Biology. Pathogens. 35.1 Infectious Disease. Pasteur & Koch came up with the germ theory of disease: infectious diseases occur when microorganisms cause physiological changes that disrupt normal body function
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Chapter 35: Immune System & Disease Ms. Luaces Honors Biology
35.1 Infectious Disease • Pasteur & Koch came up with the germ theory of disease: infectious diseases occur when microorganisms cause physiological changes that disrupt normal body function • Can be caused by viruses, bacteria, fungi, protists and parasites • Except for parasites, all others known as pathogens
35.1 Infectious Disease • Koch’s Postulates: • 1. Pathogen must always be found in sick body but not healthy body • 2. Pathogen can be isolated & grown in lab • 3. If pathogen infects healthy host, should produce sickness • 4. Pathogen can be isolated from new host & looks identical
35.1 Infectious Disease • What’s the different between a symbiont and pathogen? • Symbionts are either harmless or beneficial • Pathogens destroy host cells, release poisons, block blood flow, and take up hosts nutrients
35.1 Infectious Disease • Diseases spread through coughing, sneezing, physical contact, exchange of body fluids, contaminated water/food/animals
35.1 Infectious Disease • Natural selection favors pathogens with adaptations that help them spread from host to host • Coughing, sneezing, body-to-body contact, sexual activity, drug usage, poor sanitation • Best way to avoid infection is to constantly wash your hands!
35.1 Infectious Disease • Those pathogens that thrive in both human and animal hosts are known as zoonosis • West Nile virus, Mad cow disease, Lyme disease, Ebola • Carriers of the disease who don’t get sick are known as vectors
Let’s Practice! • Pg. 475 – 476 • Q & A • Work with a buddy – one sheet of paper for both of you!
35.2Nonspecific Defenses • Include skin, tears and other secretions, inflammatory response, interferon's and fever • First line of defense: skin, which is the most widespread defense
35.2Nonspecific Defenses • Pathogens can enter through the mouth, nose or eyes which are protected by saliva, mucus and tears • Contains lysozyme which breaks down bacterial cell walls • Stomach secretions (acid) also protect
35.2Nonspecific Defenses • Second line of defense includes inflammatory response, interferon's, and fever
35.2Nonspecific Defenses • Inflammatory response causes areas to become red and painful because of histamines (release by mast cells to increase flow of blood and fluids to the area) • White blood cells (phagocytes) will then engulf and destroy bacteria
35.2Nonspecific Defenses • Interferon's inhibit synthesis of viral proteins • Aka “interfere” with viral growth, slowing down the production of new viruses
35.2Nonspecific Defenses • Fever increases body temperature to slow down or stop the growth of some pathogens • Sometimes also speeds up several parts of the immune response
35.2 Specific Defenses • Specific defenses distinguish between “self” and “other” and inactivate / kill any foreign substance or cell that enters the body • Nonspecific = general threat • Specific = particular pathogen
35.2 Specific Defenses • Recognizes specific chemical markers on own cells – own secret password • If the marker is not recognized, will attack and remember it for later as “non-self” so that it can kill it quickly if it enters the body again: immune response
35.2 Specific Defenses • Antigens are any foreign substances that can stimulate an immune response • Found on the outer surface (the “flag”) • Immune responds by increasing # of cells to attack or produce proteins called antibodies
35.2 Specific Defenses • Antibodies tag antigens for destruction by immune cells (the “alert!!”) • The shape of each antibody allows it to bind to only one antigen – very specific
35.2 Specific Defenses • Main working cells of the immune system are • B lymphocyte cells: grow and mature in red bone marrow; have antibodies on them; attack in body fluids • T lymphocyte cells: grow in red bone marrow but mature in thymus; have to be presented with antigen to attack
35.3 Fighting Infectious Disease • Vaccination: injecting a weakened form of a pathogen, or of a similar but less dangerous pathogen, to produce immunity • Jenner
35.3 Fighting Infectious Disease • Vaccination stimulates the immune system with an antigen. The immune system produces memory B cells and T cells that quicken and strengthen the body’s response to repeated infection
35.3 Fighting Infectious Disease • 2 types of immunity: • Active: natural / deliberate exposure to antigen • Passive: antibodies are produced by other individual or animal and passed through pregnancy, breast milk, or injection (only gives TEMPORARY immunity)
35.3 Fighting Infectious Disease • 1900 – 30% deaths related to infectious diseases • 2005 - <5% deaths “ “ • How? Public health has prevented disease by monitoring & regulating food and water, providing vaccinations, and promoting healthy behaviors
35.3 Fighting Infectious Disease • Antibiotics can kill bacteria (but CANNOT kill viruses) and some antiviral medications can slow down viral activity • Alexander Fleming – discovered first antibiotic, penicillin
35.3 Fighting Infectious Disease • We had mostly wiped out polio in the U.S. & eliminated smallpox globally, but now it’s back! Why? • Human / animal interaction • Misuse of medications leads to resistance by pathogens