specific immune system Flashcards
define antigens
identifying chemical on the surface of a cell that triggers an immune response
explain the difference between self and non-self antigens
- self: on surface of your own cells
- non-self: on surface of cells of pathogens
define antibody
y-shaped glycoprotein made by B cells of the immune system in response to presence of an antigen
define antigen-antibody complex
complex formed by binding of an antibody to an antigen
define lymphocyte
WBC that make up the specific immune system
define specific immune response
acquired immune response triggered by antigens which is able to distinguish between different pathogens
describe the structure of antibodies
- glycoproteins of two identical long pp chains - heavy chains and 2 shorter identical chains - light chains
- chains held by disulfide bonds
- hinge region provides flexibility - allowing one antibody to bind to two separate antigens, one at each binding site
describe 4 ways in which antibodies defend the body
- opsonins: antigen-antibody complex easily engulfed and digested by phagocytes
- pathogens can no longer effectively invade host cells when they are part of antigen-antibody complex
- agglutinins - cause pathogens carrying complexes to clump together - prevents them from spreading and easier to engulf multiple at same time
- anti-toxins - make toxins harmless
define cell-mediated immunity
T lymphocytes respond to cells of an organism that have been changed in some way
what is cell-mediated immunity effective against
virus infections and early cancers
describe the process of cell-mediated immunity
- macrophages phagocytose pathogens, process antigens and form antigen-presenting cells
- T helper cell with complementary surface receptors to non-self antigens binds to APC
- T helper cell is stimulated to undergo mitosis to form many clones that differentiate into:
- T killer cells - destroy pathogen using perforins and toxins that trigger apoptosis
- T helper cells - secrete interleukins to stimulate phagocytosis and B cell division
- T memory cells - immunological memory of pathogen
- T regulatory cells - suppress immune response when pathogen removed
define humoural immunity
B lymphocytes produce antibodies in response to antigens pathogens outside cells
suggest what humoural immunity is particularly effective against
bacteria and fungi
describe the process of humoural immunity
- B cell with complementary surface receptor to pathogen binds to it and engulfs
- antigens are processed, B cell becomes APC
- T helper cell with complementary receptor to presented antigen binds to the APC - clonal selection
- T helper cells induced to secrete interleukins
- interleukins stimulate B cell to divide by mitosis, produce many clones of that B cell variant - clonal expansion
- the B cell then differentiates into:
- plasma cells - secrete antibodies that fit the antigens on pathogens
- B memory cells - retain immunological memory of that pathogen, stored in lymphatic tissue
- secretion of many specific antibodies by plasma cells that circulate in blood and act as: opsonins, agglutinins, anti-toxins act against pathogens - defence
define clonal selection
exposure to a specific antigen selectively stimulates the proliferation of the cell with the appropriate antibody to form numerous clones of these specific antibody-forming cells