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Microbiology Chapter 17 Spring 07

This document summarizes adaptive immunity and immunization. It describes the types of acquired immunity as actively or passively acquired. Adaptive immunity is antigen-specific, has immunological memory, and distinguishes self from non-self. It discusses humoral immunity mediated by antibodies and cell-mediated immunity carried out by T cells. Vaccination provides active immunization by inducing antibody production while passive immunization uses pre-formed antibodies.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
316 views3 pages

Microbiology Chapter 17 Spring 07

This document summarizes adaptive immunity and immunization. It describes the types of acquired immunity as actively or passively acquired. Adaptive immunity is antigen-specific, has immunological memory, and distinguishes self from non-self. It discusses humoral immunity mediated by antibodies and cell-mediated immunity carried out by T cells. Vaccination provides active immunization by inducing antibody production while passive immunization uses pre-formed antibodies.

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Chapter 17.

Adaptive Immunity
and Immunization
Types of Acquired Immunity
• Actively acquired adaptive immunity: the use of antibodies produced by one's
own body
o Naturally acquired: by having disease or infection
o Passively acquired: by receiving vaccine
• Passively acquired adaptive immunity: the use of ready-made antibodies
o Naturally acquired: infants receiving maternal antibodies across placenta
or in milk
o Passively acquired: by receiving injection of gamma globulin or immune
serum

Antigen
• Antigen: biological macromolecules able to elicit immune responses, usually
surface proteins of parasites.
• Epitopes: antigenic determinants. These are surface-exposed, small (3-5 amino
acids) areas of a protein molecule. A single antigen molecule have multiple
epitopes.
• Hapten: a small molecule that converts a normal protein into an antigen. Neither
the molecule itself nor the protein alone is an antigen. Example: penicillin, which
in some individuals binds to proteins molecules and elicit hypersensitivity
("allergy").

General Properties of Adaptive Immunity


• Dual Nature
o Humoral immunity: carried out by antibodies in the blood; most effective
against extracellular parasites (e.g., toxins, bacteria, viruses before
entering the host cell)
o Cell-mediated immunity: carried out by T cells; most effective against
intracellular infection (e.g., virus-infected cells)
• Recognition of self versus nonself
o Destroying foreign substances
o Tolerance of self tissues
o Mechanisms
 Clonal selection: selective propagation of lymphocytes (B or T
cells) that have receptors for a foreign antigen
 Clonal deletion: selective inactivation of lymphocytes that have
receptors for self antigens.
• Specificity: adaptive defenses are specific to pathogen species and strains
• Heterogeneity/Diversity: adaptive immunity is able to defend a great variety of
antigens
• Memory: the ability to respond quickly to previously encountered infections

Humoral Immunity
• Antibodies/Immunoglobins/Ig
o Y-shaped molecules consisting of 2 light chains and 2 heavy chains
o Chains are linked by disulfide fonds and have constant and variable
regions
o Variable regions of light and high chains have antigen-binding sites
o Constant regions have tissue-binding sites that can activate complement,
participate in allergic reactions, and bind to macrophage
• Classes of antibodies
o IgG: main Ig in serum; able to cross placenta; provide long-term immunity
o IgA: mostly in mucus and attached to the digestive, respiratory, and
genitourinary systems
o IgM: pentamer; antibody produced first (in T-independent primary
response)
o IgE: binds to basophils and mast cells, resulting in allergic reaction
o IgD: attached to B cells (not secreted)
• Primary and secondary responses
o Primary response:
 1st exposure to an antigen; long lag period (~5 days); IgM->IgG
switch; memory cells formed
 Two mechanisms: T-dependent (requiring activation by T-helper
cells, causing IgM->IgG switch) and T-dependent (requiring no
activation by T cells; producing IgM; no memory cells produced)
o Secondary response: subsequent exposures; rapid increase and sustained
production of IgG
• Consequences of antigen-antibody reactions: agglutination (sticking together of
microbes), opsonization, activation of complement, cell lysis, and neutralization
(inactivation of toxin, virus particles by the formation of antigen-antibody
complexes)
• Monoclonal antibodies (Mabs): single-type antibodies produced in vitro by a
clone of cultured cells. Mab-producting cells are made by fusion of mouse
myeloma cells (cancerous immune cells) and B cells.

Cell-Mediated Immunity
• Defense reactions through direct cell-cell contact (unlike molecular-level antigen-
antibody reactions in humoral immunity) between T cells and diseased cells
(virus-infected and cancer cells)
• Activation: stem cells -> T cells -> effector cells (antigen-activated T cells, reside
in thymus gland)
• Activation of helper T cells by MHC-II (Major Histocompetibility Complex,
Class II)
1. Antigen-presenting cells (APCs: B cells, dentritic cells, and macrophages)
ingest antigen and display antigen fragments (combined with MHC, self
molecules) on cell surface
2. MHC-Antigen complex binds to CD4, stimulating clonal proliferation of
the Ag-specific CD4 cells
3. CD4 cells activate cytotoxic T cells (release of destructive enzymes to kill
infected cells), B cells (producing antibodies) and macrophages
(phagocytosis)
• Activation of cytoxic T cells by MHC-I: antigen presenting by infected or cancer
cells (not by APCs)

Immunization
• Active immunization/Vaccination (protection by one's own antibodies; not for
treatment because there is a lag period for antibody production). Types of
vaccines:
o Living, attanuated pathogens (e.g., measles & mumps)
o Dead pathogens (e.g., Rabies)
o Subcellular structures (e.g., recombinant HBV surface antigen)
o Toxoids (denatured toxins, e.g, anthrax, tetanus)
• Passive Immunization (the use of ready-made antibodies; offers immediate but
temporary protection)
o Antisera: contains antibodies against e.g., hepatitis A
o Antitoxins: for treatment of tetanus, snake/spider bites
o Anti-Rh: antibodies given to mother to protect Rh-positive new borns

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