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Chapter 43 ~ The Body’s Defenses. Lines of Defense Pathogen- any virus or living organism capable of causing a disease. –Most pathogens that enter our.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 43 ~ The Body’s Defenses. Lines of Defense Pathogen- any virus or living organism capable of causing a disease. –Most pathogens that enter our."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 43 ~ The Body’s Defenses

2 Lines of Defense Pathogen- any virus or living organism capable of causing a disease. –Most pathogens that enter our body don’t cause disease –Why are antibiotics effective?

3 Phagocytic and Natural Killer Cells Macrophages enzymatically destroy microbes Are phagocytic leukocytes. Will change shape to surround and invader Self vs. not-self Non-specific immunity Natural killer (NK) cells destroy virus-infected body cells & abnormal cells

4 Specific Immunity Lymphocyctes leukocytes that produce antibodies B Cells (bone marrow), produce antibody T Cells (thymus) help activate B cells Antigen: a foreign molecule that elicits a response by lymphocytes, “not-self” proteins (virus, bacteria, fungus, protozoa, parasitic worms) Antibodies: produced by B cells, protein molecule we produce in response to a specific type of pathogen

5 Antibody Structure and Production Each antibody if different and specific for one type of antigen As a GROUP though very similar Antibodies are proteins and are Y shaped At end of fork is binding site- where antibody attaches to anitgen Because antigen is a protein on surface of pathogen, antibody becomes attached.

6 Antibody Production (cont) 1- specific antigen is recognized 2- specific B lymphocyte identified that can produce antibody to bind to antigen 3- B lymphocyte and several identical B cells clone themselves rapidly to increase numbers 4- now “army” begins antibody production 5- newly released antibodies in bloodstream finding antigen match 6- destroy pathogen 7- some clones antibody produce lymphocytes that remain in blood and give immunity for second infection= MEMORY CELLS

7 The Inflammatory Response 1- Tissue injury; release of chemical signals~ in blood plasma, have plasma proteins; 2 of them are prothrombin and fibrinogen…they are always present until called into action, also have platelets 2/3- Dilation and increased permeability of capillary~ - platelets adhere to damaged area clotting factors; thrombin 4- Phagocytosis of pathogens~

8 Clonal selection Effector cells: short-lived cells that combat the antigen Memory cells: long-lived cells that bear receptors for the antigen Clonal selection: antigen-driven cloning of lymphocytes “Each antigen, by binding to specific receptors, selectively activates a tiny fraction of cells from the body’s diverse pool of lymphocytes; this relatively small number of selected cells gives rise to clones of thousands of cells, all specific for and dedicated to eliminating the antigen.”

9 Induction of Immune Responses Primary immune response: called polyclonal. Why? Importance?..can’t separate the different antibodies produced Monoclonal antibodies are “pure” anitbodies Secondary immune response: immune response if the individual is exposed to the same antigen at some later time ~ Immunological memory

10 Monoclonal Antibodies How do we get them?

11 Immunity in Health & Disease Active immunity/natural: conferred immunity by recovering from disease Active immunity/artificial: immunization and vaccination; produces a primary response Passive immunity: transfer of immunity from one individual to another natural: mother to fetus; breast milk artificial: rabies antibodies..can’t wait to build up immunity

12 Abnormal immune function Allergies (anaphylactic shock): hypersensitive responses to environmental antigens (allergens); causes dilation and blood vessel permeability (antihistamines); epinephrine Autoimmune disease: multiple sclerosis, lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, insulin- dependent diabetes mellitus Immunodeficiency disease: SCIDS (bubble-boy); A.I.D.S.

13 Vaccines Fundamental principle of immunity: can’t be immune to a pathogen without being exposed at least once. Benefits vs. dangers


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