Lecture 1: Intro to the immune system Flashcards
What do B cells (B lymphocytes (white blood cells)) produce?
Antibodies
Where do B cells mature?
In the bone marrow
What part of the immune response do B cells belong to?
The adaptive/acquired and humoral (fluids/lymph/blood) immune response
What is a vaccination?
Introduction of a dead or weakened antigen (bacteria/virus/toxin) to the immune system so that the adaptive immune system can “meet” the antigen and produce antibodies against it so that if you run into that antigen/infection again your body already knows how to mount a response against it (so if you get sick you won’t get nearly as sick)
What is the primary difference between the innate and adaptive immune responses?
The adaptive immune response has the ability to “remember” specific pathogens
The adaptive response is also systemic rather than restricted to a specific mucous membrane, such as the sinus cavity
What are the three main characteristics of the adaptive immune response?
- It is specific (through antibodies)
- It is systemic (via the blood and lymph)
- It has a memory
What are the two components of the adaptive immune response?
- Humoral immunity (blood and lymph systems)
2. Cellular defenses
What are antigens?
An external “invader” or foreign object: essentially “non-self” material
Bacteria, viruses, fungus, toxins, pollen, and even cancerous cells
What is immunocompetence?
The ability of a B cell to recognize “friend or foe,” this ability is developed while maturing in the bone marrow.
Also how to recognize and bind a particular antigen
While also developing “self-tolerance” so the immune system doesn’t attack the healthy cells of the body it belongs to
Membrane bound antibodies
Expressed on the surface of B cells
Each B cell expresses one unique type of membrane bound antibody so that your adaptive immune system is highly diversified and prepared for attack
What happens when a mature but inactive B cell meets its “perfect match” antigen?
The B cell becomes activated and goes into “berserker mode,” dividing and producing two specific B cell sub-types
What two types of cells do B cells produce once activated by their antigen?
Effector cells: active fighters which can produce free floating versions of their membrane bound antibodies that can target the specific antigen
Memory cells: long lived “mages” that preserve the genetic code for the successful antibody that originally matched the invading antigen
Memory B cells
Hang around and are able to mount a faster attack when the body is re-exposed to a previously experienced pathogen.
This is why vaccines against diseases like measles, mumps, rubella, and chickenpox are so effective. The memory B cells make our immune systems more effective so we don’t become reinfected even when re-exposed to these antigens.
The secondary immune response is both stronger and faster than the initial immune response when the B cell needed to “meet” its “perfect match” antigen for the first time
Another name for effector B cells
Plasma cells
What organelle do plasma cells have an abundance of?
Rough endoplasmic reticulum
This is to pump out tons of free floating antibodies
What do free floating antibodies do?
They travel through the blood and lymph, binding to their antigen match, thus marking those antigens for death/phagocytosis
They can also block the binding sites on viral and bacterial toxins to prevent them from binding to your tissues
What is agglutination?
When free floating antibodies (which have multiple binding sites) bind to multiple antigens forming clumps so they have a harder time getting around and are easier for macrophages to consume and digest
Why aren’t babies immunized right after birth?
Because in the first few months their immune systems are passively acquired through the placenta and breast milk and their B cells can’t create memories from those acquired free floating antibodies