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The Lymphatic System and Immunity

The Lymphatic System and Immunity. Lymph, lymph capillaries, ducts, nodes and other lymphoid organs. Functions. Filter and absorb excess tissue fluid and return it back into circulation Transport of dietary lipids via lacteals Carry out immune responses. Lymph and Lymph Capillaries .

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The Lymphatic System and Immunity

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  1. The Lymphatic System and Immunity Lymph, lymph capillaries, ducts, nodes and other lymphoid organs

  2. Functions • Filter and absorb excess tissue fluid and return it back into circulation • Transport of dietary lipids via lacteals • Carry out immune responses

  3. Lymph and Lymph Capillaries • Lymph - clear, watery fluid resembling interstitial fluid • Lymph capillaries - begin as blind-ended capillaries consisting of simple squamous epithelium allowing one-way movement of fluid

  4. Lymph Vessels • Formed from merging capillaries • Have thin walls and posses valves • Thoracic duct originates as cisterna chyli draining abdomen, extremities, and left side of body • Right lymphatic duct - drains lymph from the right arm and upper right side of body

  5. Elephantiasis • Blockage of the lymphatic system by parasitic worms • Transmitted by mosquitos • Causes severe swelling

  6. Lymph nodes • Oval structures clustered along lymphatic vessels that serve to filter lymph • Consists of capsule, cortex, and medulla • Cortex contains mostly lymphocytes • Medulla filled with macrophages

  7. Accessory Structures • Spleen • Thymus • Tonsils • pharyngeal • palatine • lingual

  8. Spleen • Size of a fist • Located in left superior abdominal cavity • Functions: • Lymphocyte storage & surveillance • Blood cleansing • Recycles blood products • Fetal erythrocyte production • Stores blood platelets

  9. Thymus • Located in lower neck, upper thoracic region • Secretes hormones, thymosin & thymopoietin • Function: T-cell maturation • Decreases in size with age

  10. Tonsils • Form ring around entrance to throat • Epithelial surface invaginates to form crypts that trap bacteria & particulate matter • Types: • Palatine tonsils - visible tonsils • Pharyngeal tonsil (adenoids) • Lingual tonsil - at base of tongue • Tubal tonsils - surround the openings to the auditory tubes

  11. Other aggregates of lymphoid tissue • Peyer’s patches - nodules located in the ileum portion of the small intestine • Appendix • Destroy bacteria in the digestive system • Belong to MALT (Mucosa-Associated Lymphatic Tissue

  12. Disorders of the Lymphatic System • Hodgkin’s disease - malignant cancer of the lymph nodes • Lymphoma - any tumor of the lymphoid tissue (benign or malignant) • Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma - all cancers of lymphoid tissues except Hodgkin’s disease

  13. Tonsilitis - inflammation of the tonsils • Mononucleosis - caused by Epstein-barr virus attacking the B-lymphocytes which are in turn attacked by oversized T-lymphocytes. These were misidentified orginally as monocytes.

  14. Nonspecific Resistance

  15. Mechanical Barriers • Skin - epidermis • Mucous membranes • Cilia - hair, mucus • Flushing mechanisms

  16. Chemical Protection • Lysozymes - in tears & saliva • Sebum - • Gastric juice • Body secretions - • Acid = pH 3-5 • Mucus

  17. Antimicrobial substances • Interferons • defend against viruses, suppress tumors and enhance phagocytosis; • stimulates production of PKR which interferes with viral replication • Complement • >20 proteins that attach and “lyse” the cell • opsonization (enhances phagocytosis) • enhances the inflammatory response

  18. Non-specific Immunity • Phagocytosis • Macrophages, Neutrophils • chemotaxis, adherence, ingestion, destroy • Natural Killer Cells (NK) • Large granular lymphocytes • Attach and release “perforins”

  19. Inflammation • swelling, redness, pain, heat • histamines = promote dilation & permeability • Phagocyte mobilization • Leukocytosis - leukocyte production • Margination - neutrophils collect inside nearby capillaries • Diapedesis - neutrophils squeeze out of capillaries into tissues • Chemotaxis - neutrophils are attracted to injury • Monocytes follow; become Macrophages

  20. Fever • Pyrogens released by leukocytes & macrophages raise body temperature • Inhibits growth of microorganisms • Increases metabolic rate of cells • Can denature enzymes

  21. Specific Immunity Characteristics: specificity memory self recognition

  22. Types of Cells • Lymphocytes arise from hemocytoblasts in the bone marrow • B cells develop immunocompetence in the bone marrow • T cells - mature in thymus

  23. Types of Immunity • Antibody-mediated immunity • humoral immunity • involves B cells and the production of antibodies • Cell - mediated immunity • cellular immunity • involves the destruction of intracellular pathogens by T cells

  24. Antigens • Any substance that can elicit an immune response • Immunogenicity - “antibody-generating” • Haptens - incomplete antigens (allergens) • Major histocompatibility complex antigens (MHC-I, MHC-II) ; “Self”-proteins • Class I - found on all cells • Class II - found only on certain cells

  25. Antibodies = immunoglobulins • Highly specific soluble proteins secreted by plasma cells in response to an antigen • Structure of an antibody • Heavy and light chains • Variable and constant regions • Up to a Billion different variables • Antigen-binding sites

  26. Antibodies • Five classes of antibodies • IgM - first released; can fix complement • IgA - usually found in secretions • IgD - B-cell receptor • IgG - most abundant; crosses placenta; can fix complement • IgE - causes allergic reactions

  27. Antibody - Mediated Immunity • B cells are activated by the presence of a foreign antigen which is taken into the B cell, processed and then displayed in combination with an MHC-II molecule the on the cell’s surface • Activated B cells develop into clones of antibody producing plasma cells • Plasma cells produce antibodies (2,000/sec) • Costimulation by Helper T cells useful

  28. Functions of Antibodies • Agglutination • Precipitation • Neutralization • Enhanced phagocytosis • Complement activation

  29. Immunological Memory • Primary response - first exposure • Secondary response - 2nd, 3rd, 4th, etc. • Faster • Higher Levels • More efficient

  30. Active & Passive Immunity • Active = caused by encounter with antigens • Natural - acquired by infection & disease • Artificial - acquired by vaccination • Passive = caused by encounter with antibodies • Natural - acquired from Mom; antibodies cross placenta • Artificial - acquired from immune sera such as: gamma globulin, antivenom, antitoxins

  31. Cell - Mediated Immunity • T cells recognize and respond only to processed antigen presented by an APC (antigen presenting cell) • Binding of T cell to macrophage causes secretion of interleukin-I which helps activate T helper cells (also called CD4 or T4 cells) • TH cells secrete IL-2 which enhances B cell activity and costimulates cytotoxic T cells (CD8 or T8 cells)

  32. Types of Lymphocytes • Helper T cells - TH • Stimulates other B & T cells (co-stimulation) • Cytotoxic (killer)T cells - T8 • Kills invaded cells, cancer cells, rejects tissue • Delayed Hypersensitivity T cells - TDH • Stimulates macrophages • Suppressor T cells - TS • Slows or stops B & T cells • Memory T cells • remain in body for years for secondary response

  33. Cytokines • Interferons • Interleukins • Lymphotoxins • Macrophage migration inhibitory factor • Perforins • Supressor factors • Complement

  34. Immunodeficiencies • SCID - Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Syndrome • Acquired Immunodeficiencies • Disease induced; Hodgkins, Leukemia • Chemically induced; immune suppressing drugs • AIDS • Diagnosed 1981; Began ?

  35. AutoImmune Disorders • Multiple Sclerosis - affects white matter of CNS • Myasthenia Gravis - destroys Ach receptors between nerves & muscles • Graves’ Disease - causes hyperthyroidism • Type I Juvenile Diabetes - destroys insulin-producing cells • Systemic Lupus Erythematosus - • Rheumatoid Arthritis - attacks joint tissues

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