Nobel Worthy
Nobel Worthy
Nobel Worthy
discoveries about the immune system. In a strange twist of fate, Ralph Steinman, 68, who shared the prize with American Bruce Beutler and French scientist Jules Ho mann, died on Sept. 30 of pancreatic cancer. He had been treated with immunotherapy based on his discovery of dendritic cells two decades earlier and is said to have prolonged his life. A brief look at our immune system
Bacteria and viruses on the outside try to enter our bodies through various means.
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Major parts of our immune system
The complement system
IN MINUTES
A complex system
The immune system is made up of several types of cells and proteins that have di erent jobs to do in ghting foreign invaders.
Thymus
Phagocytes
group of immune cells specialized in finding and "eating" bacteria, viruses, and dead or injured body cells.
White blood cells called lymphocytes originate in the bone marrow but migrate to parts of the lymphatic system such as the lymph nodes, spleen, and thymus.
Lymphocytes
These proteins ow freely in the blood and can quickly reach the site of an invasion where they can react directly with antigens molecules that the body recognizes as foreign substances.
defeated, it will strike much more quickly and more ercely against it. As a result, it will most likely be wiped out before there are any symptoms of disease (making us "immune" to the disease)
Sources: nobelprize.org
Defensive cells that ght bacteria If the immune are called system detects an immune invader it has previously cells
When activated, the complement proteins can trigger inammation attract eater cells such as macrophages to the area coat intruders so that eater cells are more likely to devour them kill intruders
Granulocytes: take the rst stand during an infection, attack invaders and devour them until they die. The pus in an infected wound consists chiey of dead granulocytes.
Macrophages: are slower to respond to invaders than the granulocytes, but are larger, live longer, and have far greater capacities. Play a key part in alerting the rest of the immune system of invaders.
Dendritic cells: Devour intruders; also capable of ltering body uids to clear them of foreign organisms and particles.
T cells: the driving force and the main regulators of the immune defense. Their primary task is to activate B cells and killer T cells.
B cells: search for antigen matching its receptors; Then receives proteins from helper T cells to become activated; B cells divides itself to produce new cells which kill the antibodies.
Antigen
SUSAN BATSFORD, GRAPHICS EDITOR, TWITTER @SBATS1; INFOGRAPHIC BY TARA CORRAN/QMI AGENCY