5.3 Clonal Selection
antigen exposure
B and T cells require this to become activated
clonal selection
B and T cells specific to a certain antigen are "selected" and activated by exposure to that antigen.
adulthood
By this time you thymus has already produced and sent out all of the T cells it will ever make
lymphatic system
Network of vessels, ducts, nodes, and organs that collects fluid that leaks from tissues and screens it for pathogens before returning it to the blood stream.
Phagocytosis
Pathogens or antigens covered with antibodies will be "eaten" by phagocytic cells through
clonal expansion
Rapid cell division of specific B or T cells after "selection"/activation by a specific antigen.
Antibodies
Specificity of B cells comes from the variable region of their
TCRs
Specificity of T cells comes from their (T Cell Receptors)
Thymus
T cells mature here before migrating to the lymph node to hang out and wait for possible pathogen exposure. This organ is at 1st largest in babies and shrinks throughout life.
Neutralization
antibodies bind to pathogen surface proteins preventing infection of a host cell
Complement
antibodies bound to these innate immune system proteins target them to infected cells for lysis
Agglutination
antibodies cause antigens/pathogens to clump together
gene rearrangement
process in developing B and T cells that results in offspring cells with billions of slightly different antibody or T cell receptor structures
lymph nodes
small oval clumps of lymphatic tissue throughout the body where B and T cells encounter APCs and pathogens as they flow through.
mitosis
type of cell division that B and T cells do during clonal expansion.