humoral immunity

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cell mediated immunity

immune system response mediated by t cells and directed against parasites, fungi, intracellular viruses, and foreign tissues (grafts)

how are antibodies encoded

there are millions of antibodies with different antigen binding sites but not millions of genes antibodies are made by shuffling different domains which are encoded by genes

immunological memory

1. primary immune response to antigen A produces antibody to A 2. secondary immune response to antigen A produces antibodies to A, primary immune response to antigen B produces antibodies to B

heavy chain rearrangement

1. the variable for the heavy chain of a specific antibody is encoded by one V gene, one D gene, and one J gene; each of these genes is taken from a pool of like genes 2. the constant region is selected from another pool of genes; the number of possible combos to make an immunoglobulin heavy chain from these pools of genes is (100 V)(30 D)(6 J)(8 C) = 144,000 3. after V, D, J, C DNA segments have been joined, the resulting functional supergene is transcribed 4. splicing of the primary RNA transcript removes any introns

clonal selection steps

1. this b cell makes an antibody that binds this specific antigen 2. this binding, along with signals from TH cells, stimulates B cell to divide, resulting in clone of cells 3. primary immune response: some cells develop into plasma cells (effector B cells) that secrete same antibody as parent cell 4. potential secondary immune response: a few cells develop into non-secreting memory cells that divide at low rate, perpetuating the clone

five classes of antibodies

IgG, IgM, IgD, IgA, IgE

functions of antibodies

agglutination, precipitation neutralization, opsonization, stimulation of complement response

precipitation

antigen is no longer soluble

opsonization

binding of antibody to antigen increase likelihood of phagocytosis, not too effective against virus

agglutination

clumping antigen

IgA

dimer, saliva, tears, milk, and other body secretions, protects mucosal surfaces, prevents attachment of pathogens to epithelial cells

how Igs are encoded by genes

each of the chains of the Ig's has a constant region and a variable region the stuffing and joining of the domains occurs in embryos; heavy and light chains are chosen independently diversity is further enhanced by a high mutation rate and sloppy joining of domains DNA is lost from the maturing B-lymphocytes as the rearrangements occur; other cells don't lose this DNA only one of the two homologs undergoes rearrangement; the other is silenced this loss of DNA and silencing makes choice of antibody irreversible the constant region of the heavy chain can be altered later, changing Ig class

antigens

foreign molecules (proteins or carbs) that elicit an immune response

neutralize

interfere with antigen's function

b cells

make antibodies

IgG

monomer, free in blood plasma, 80% of circulating antibodies, most abundant antibody in primary and secondary immune responses, crosses placenta and provides passive immunization to fetus

IgD

monomer, surface of B cell, cell surface receptor of mature B cell, important in B cell activation

stimulation of complement response

not effective against virus

IgM

pentamer, surface of B cell, free in blood plasma, antigen receptor on B cell membrane, first class of antibodies released by B cells during primary response

antibody

peptides that recognize specific antigens at their specific epitopes

epitopes

regions on antigen that antibody binds to

humoral immunity

response of immune system mediated by b cells that produces circulating antibodies active against extracellular bacterial and viral infections

IgE

secreted by plasma cells in skin and tissues lining gastrointestinal and respiratory tracts, binds to mast cells and basophils to sensitize them to subsequent binding of antigen which triggers release of histamine that contributes to inflammation and some allergic responses

4 key features of adaptive immunity

specificity, distinguish self from not self, diversity, memory


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