Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Cell mediated
and humoral
- Cell mediated
- Process
- Antigens
- Any part of an organism recognised as foreign by the immune system
- Proteins that are part of the cell surface membrane
- Their presence triggers the production of an antibody as part of the bodys defence system
- Lymphocytes
- The body also has specific responses to react to infection
- These are slower at first but can provide long term immunity
- Depends on white blood cells called lymphocytes
- Two types, each with its own immune response
- B cells
- Humoral immunity, involving antibodies present in body fluids
- Matures in bone marrow
- Produces antibodies
- Responds to foreign material outside cells
- Responnds to bacteria and viruses
- T cells
- Cell mediated, involving body cells
- Matures in thymus gland
- Responds to foreign material inside cells
- Responds to own cells altered by viruses or cancer and to transplanted tissues
- How T Cells distinguish
- Phagocytes that have engulfed and broken down a pathogen present
some of the pathogens antigens on their own surface membrane
- Body cells invaded by a virus present some of the viral
antigens on their own surface as a sign of distress
- Cancer cells present antigens on their own cell surface membrane
- These cells are called antigen-presenting cells because they
can present antigens of other cells on their own surface
- Types of T cells
- Cytotoxic
- Combine with antigens
- Release lymphokines
- Make holes in membrane
- Freely permeable
- Helper
- Co-operate with B cells in antibody production
- Activate macrophages
- Promote inflamation
- Suppressor
- Keep immune system in check
- Memory
- Remain after pathogen has gone
- Produce rapid response to future infection
- Humoral
- Process
- Types of B cells
- Plasma
- Sercrete antibodies directly
- Only survive a few days
- Antibodies destroy the pathogen and any toxins it produces
- Primary immune response
- Memory
- Live often for decades
- Don't directly produce antibodies
- Circulate in blood and tissue fluid
- Divide rapidly and develop into plasma cells
- Plasma cells then produce antibodies
- Long term immunity
- Secondary immune response
- More rapid
- Greater intensity
- Antigenic variability
- Some pathogens have different strains
- Antigens are constantly changing
- Subsequent infections likely to be caused by a different variety of pathogen
- Antigens will not correspond to antibodies or the memory cells formed during previous infections
- No appropriate memory cells, so primary response must be used
- Humoral
- Involves antibodies which are soluable in blood and tissue fluid
- When an antigen enters the blood or tissue fluid, there will be one type
of B cell that has an antibody whose shape exactly fits the antigen
- Antibody attaches to appropriate antigen
- B cell divides by mitosis to form a clone, which produce antibodies
- Toxins also act as antigens