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BODY DEFENSE SYSTEM. animal/human must defend , against intruders;-pathogen…??..bax, virus, fungi, pathogen from air, water, food, environment…. Body defense system/immunity? DEFINITION: ability of an organism to recognize and defend itself against pathogen
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animal/human must defend , against intruders;-pathogen…??..bax, virus, fungi, pathogen from air, water, food, environment…. Body defense system/immunity? DEFINITION: ability of an organism to recognize and defend itself against pathogen resisting the attack of many dangerous organisms.
IMMUNOLOGY 201 Chapter 1: Body defense system Chapter 2 Innate Host Defenses
Outcome from today`s lesson… • Understand innate and adaptive immunity • Roles of innate immunity • Component of innate immunity
DEFINITION: Innate and Adaptive immunity Host defenses that produce resistance against infection can be adaptive or innate • Innate defenses: those that act against any type of invading agent • Adaptive defenses: respond to particular agents called antigens (e.g. viruses and pathogenic bacteria) Only when our resistance fails do we become susceptible to infection by pathogens
Adaptive Defenses • Respond to antigens by producing protein antibodies • Also involve the activation of the lymphocytes • Lymphocytes: specific cells of the body’s immune system • Antibody and cellular responses are more effective against succeeding invasions by same pathogen than against initial invasions
Innate Defenses • Physical barriers • Chemical barriers • Mechanical Barrier • Cellular Barrier • Inflammation • Fever • Molecular defenses
Physical Barriers • Skin and mucous membranes protect your body and internal organs from injury and infectious agents • These two physical barriers are made of cells that line body surfaces and secrete chemicals • human beta-defensin-2 on human skin destroys pathogens by poking holes in bacterial membranes • Mucosa covers those tissues and organs of body cavity exposed to exterior
Chemical Barriers • High salt content of sweat inhibits bacteria from growing • Sweat and sebum produced by sebaceous glands have low pH that inhibits growth of bacteria • Acidic pH of stomach is a defense against intestinal pathogens • Lysozyme: present in tears, saliva, and mucus, cleaves peptidoglycan linkage in bacterial cell wall
Mechanical barrierFunction:- prevent/flush invading microbes in different type of mechanical way • Hair and mucus- nasal, respirotary system • Coughing and sneezing • Urinary flow- remove microbes in urinary tract • Tears and saliva – flush bacteria from eyes and mouth • Vomitting and diarrhea- flush bacteria from digestive tract
Cellular Defenses – Defensive Cells • Blood consists of about 60% liquid called plasma and 40% formed elements (cells) • Formed elements: erthyrocytes, platelets, and leukocytes • Leukocytes are defensive cells important to adaptive and innate host defenses
Granulocytes • Have granular cytoplasm and an irregularly shaped, lobed nucleus • Include: • Basophils: release histamine which helps initiate inflammatory response • Mast cells: prevalent in connective tissue, release histamine, and associated with allergies • Eosinophils: present in large numbers during allergic reactions • Neutrophils (polymorphonuclear leukocytes): phagocytic cells that guard skin/mucous membranes against infection • Dendritic cells: phagocytic cells that resemble nerve cells
Agranulocytes • Lack granular cytoplasm with round nuclei • Include: • Monocytes: phagocytic cells derived from myeloid stem cells • Lymphocytes: derived from lymphoid stem cells and contribute to adaptive host immunity • Lymphocytes circulate in blood and are found in lymph nodes, spleen, thymus and tonsils
Phagocytes • Cells that literally eat or engulf materials • Monocytes, dendritic cell, neutrophils, eosinophils, • Patrol, or circulate through body, destroying dead cells and cellular debris • Guard the skin/mucous membranes against invasion by microorganisms • Macrophages(formed from monocytes): “big eaters” that destroy not only microorganisms but also larger particles
The Process of Phagocytosis • Phagocytes digest and destroy invading microbes and foreign particles by a process called phagocytosis • Phagocytic cells must: Find Adhere to Ingest Digest the microorganisms
Chemotaxis • Phagocytes in tissues first must recognize invading microorganisms • pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) on the phagocytic cells recognize molecular patterns unique to pathogen • Phagocytes release cytokines that have specific roles in host defenses • Chemokines: a class of cytokines that attract additional phagocytes to site of infection
Adherence and Ingestion • The ability of the phagocyte cell membrane to bind to specific molecules on the surface of the microbe is called adherence • Antiphagocytic capsule: the most common means by which bacteria avoid phagocytosis • Complement system: coat microbes with antibodies to aid phagocyte in adherence • Phagosome: pseudopodia fuse and enclose microorganism within this cytoplasmic vacuole
Digestion • Phagocytic cells have several mechanisms for digesting and destroying ingested microbes • Phagolysosome: lysosomes with digestive enzymes fuse with phagosome membrane • Macrophages use other metabolic products to kill ingested microbes: • Oxygen to form hydrogen peroxide • Nitric oxide and superoxide ions
Extracellular killing • What if the intruder is larger than the Macrophage/neutrophils? The killing need to be done extracellularlly by… Eosinophils- excreting toxic enzymes (MBP) –kill worm Natural killer cell- secrete cytotoxic proteins that kill intracellular
Molecular Defenses • Involve the action of interferon and complement • Interferon: interfered with viral replication in other cells • Humans have three groups of interferon (alpha, beta, and gamma) • Antiviral enzymes
Complement • Refers to a set of more than 20 large regulatory proteins that play a key role in host defense • General functions of the complement system are: • Enhance phagocytosis • Lyse pathogens directly • Generate peptide fragments that regulate inflammation and immune responses • Works as a cascade: a set of reactions that amplify some effect
Inflammation • The body’s defensive response to tissue damage from microbial infection • Characterized by signs: • an increase in temperature • redness • swelling • pain at infected or injured site
Fever • The elevation of body temperature to kill invading agents and/or inactivate their toxic products HOW? • Raises temperature above opt. temp. of pathogens • Microbial enzymes or toxins is inactivated • Increase immune response • Phagocytosis is enhanced • Antiviral interferon production is increased • Fever makes patient lie to rest.. • Increased breakdown of lysosomes causing death of infected cell and microbes