What Is Immunity?

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Immunity

What is immunity?
 Immunity is the body's ability to fight off
harmful micro-organisms –PATHOGENS-
that invade it.

 The immune system produces antibodies


or cells that can deactivate pathogens.

 Fungi, protozoans, bacteria, and viruses


are all potential pathogens.
What advantage do pathogens
have over humans?

 All
have a short life span and
reproductive time.

 So what?
What is an infectious disease?
 Aninfectious disease is one in which
minute organisms, invisible to the
naked eye, invade and multiply
within the body.

 Manyof these organisms are


contagious, that is they spread
between people in close contact.
 Thefirst person to identify microbes
as causing disease was Robert Koch.

 We still use Koch’s Postulates in


disease identification.
Koch’s Postulates
1. Pathogen must be found in the host in
every case.

2. Pathogen must be isolated from the host


and grown in pure culture.

3. When placed in a healthy host, pathogen


produced in pure culture must cause the
disease in the host.

4. Pathogen must be isolated from the new


host and shown to be the original
pathogen.
 Endemic diseases are those found normally
in a population.

 For example…….
 An epidemic disease is a disease that many
people acquire over a short period of time.

 For example………
 A pandemic disease is a world-wide
epidemic disease.

 For example……….
 An antibiotic is a chemical substance
derivable from a mold or bacterium
that kills microorganisms and cures
infections.
The Immune System - includes all
parts of the body that help in the
recognition and destruction of
foreign materials.  White blood cells,
phagocytes and lymphocytes, bone
marrow, lymph nodes, tonsils,
thymus, and your spleen are all part
of the immune system.  
 First-Line Defenses /Innate Immune
System- The body's first line of defense
against pathogens uses mostly physical
and chemical barriers such as
 Skin – acts as a barrier to invasion
 Sweat – has chemicals which can kill
different pathogens.
 Tears - have lysozyme which has powerful
digestive abilities that render antigens
harmless.
 Saliva – also has lysozyme.
 Mucus - can trap pathogens, which are then
sneezed, coughed, washed away, or
destroyed by chemicals.
 Stomach Acid – destroys pathogens
 Second-Line Defenses - If a pathogen
is able to get past the body's first line
of defense, and an infection starts, the
body can rely on it's second line of
defense.  This will result in what is
called an……….
 Inflammatory response causes
 Redness - due to capillary dilation
resulting in increased blood flow

 Heat- due to capillary dilation resulting in


increased blood flow

 Swelling– due to passage of plasma from


the blood stream into the damaged tissue

 Pain– due mainly to tissue destruction


and, to a lesser extent, swelling.
 Third-Line Defenses - Sometimes the second
line of defense is still not enough and the
pathogen is then heading for the body's last
line of defense, the immune system.  

 The immune system recognizes, attacks,


destroys, and remembers each pathogen that
enters the body.  It does this by making
specialized cells and antibodies that render the
pathogens harmless.
 
 Unlike the first line and second line defense the
immune system differentiates among
pathogens.

 For each type of pathogen, the immune system


produces cells that are specific for that
particular pathogen. 
 An antibody is a protein produced in
response to an antigen.
 Antigens are macromolecules that elicit an
immune response in the body. The most
common antigens are proteins and
polysaccharides.
 Antigens can enter the body from the environment.
These include

 inhaled macromolecules (e.g., proteins on cat hairs


that can trigger an attack of asthma in susceptible
people)

 ingested macromolecules (e.g., shellfish proteins


that trigger an allergic response in susceptible
people)

 molecules that are introduced beneath the skin


(e.g., on a splinter or in an injected vaccine)
 antigens can be generated within the
cells of the body. These include

 proteinsencoded by the genes of


viruses that have infected a cell

 aberrantproteins that are encoded


by mutant genes; such as mutated
genes in cancer cells
 Lymph is a milky body fluid that contains
a type of white blood cells, called
lymphocytes, along with proteins and fats.

 Lymph seeps outside the blood vessels in


spaces of body tissues and is stored in the
lymphatic system to flow back into the
bloodstream.
 Through the flow of blood in and out of arteries, and
into the veins, and through the lymph nodes and into
the lymph, the body is able to eliminate the products of
cellular breakdown and bacterial invasion.
 There are more than 100 tiny, oval
structures called lymph nodes. These
are mainly in the neck, groin and
armpits, but are scattered all along
the lymph vessels.

 They act as barriers to infection by


filtering out and destroying toxins and
germs. The largest body of lymphoid
tissue in the human body is the
spleen.
 Asthe lymph flows through lymph
vessels, it passes through lymph nodes.

 Whiteblood cells called macrophages


trap and engulf cell debris and
pathogens. Other white blood cells, called

 Lymphocytes - are a type of white blood


cell capable of producing a
specific immune response to unique
antigens. They produce antibodies which
are chemicals that mark pathogens for
destruction.  
The scanning electron micrograph above, shows a
human macrophage (gray) approaching a chain of
Streptococcus pyogenes (yellow). Riding atop the
macrophage is a spherical lymphocyte. Both
macrophages and lymphocytes can be found near
an infection, and the interaction between these
cells is important in eliminating infection.
 Once a white cell has left the blood vessel and
migrated to the enemy, the next job is to EAT the
microbe.

 The macrophage is a large phagocyte. A


phagocyte is an eating cell (phago = "eating",
cyte = "cell") which engulfs invaders.
 Immunity is the result of the action of two types lymphocytes,
the B lymphocytes and the T lymphocytes.

 B cells produce antibodies that are secreted into the blood and
lymph.
 
 T cells attack the cells that have antigens that they recognize.
 Killer T Cells (lymphocytes) recognize surface
markers on other cells labeled for destruction.
They, Killer T Cells, help to keep virus-infected
or malignant cells in check.

 Here, a smaller Killer T Cell (arrow) is attacking


and killing a much larger flu virus-infected
target. The sequence represents 30 minutes
elapsed time.
 It has been estimated that during our lifetime,
we will encounter a million foreign antigens
capable of causing disease, and our bodies
need the same amount of lymphocytes to
defend against them.  

 There will always be a different type of


lymphocyte for each possible antigen.
•Active Immunity occurs when when
one makes his/her own antibodies. This
type of immunity is long term.
•Getting the disease : If you get an
infectious disease (like Chicken Pox),
often times, that stimulates the
production of MEMORY cells which
are then stored to prevent the
infection in the future.
injection of a weakened form of the
actual antigen that causes the
disease. The injection is too weak to
make you sick, but your B
lymphocytes will recognize the
antigen and react as if it were the
"real thing". Thus, you produce
MEMORY cells for long term
immunity.
Passive Immunity occurs when the
antibodies come from some other source.
This type of immunity is short term.
Breastmilk : Milk
from a mother's
breast contains
antibodies. The
baby is acquiring
passive immunity.
These antibodies
will only last
several weeks.
Gamma Globulin: A Gamma Globulin shot is
purely an injection of antibodies to provide
temporary immunity. You might receive an
Gamma Globulin shot if you travel outside of
the country.

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