Bio Exam 3 (Chapter 24)
Memory cells
long-lived cells found in the lymph nodes, ready to attack should a "known" antigen infect the body again.
Adaptive immunity
continually develops over your lifetime as it encounters and attacks specific pathogens. ensures you will have better protection from a specific pathogen each time you encounter it. strictly internal, deploying when innate immunity defenses fail to ward off a pathogen.
B cells
fully develop and become specialized in the bone marrow. Must be primed. defend primarily against pathogens circulating in body fluids.
interstitial fluid
Nutrients and wastes for all cells are exchanged in this. Most of this fluid reenters the blood and the circulatory system through capillaries, but some remains in the tissue. This excess fluid flows into small lymphatic vessels.
vertebrates
Only *blank* have adaptive immunity
The internal innate defenses depend on
white blood cells and defensive proteins.
Phagocytic cells
white blood cells that engulf foreign cells or molecules and debris from dead cells by phagocytosis, or "cellular eating."
immune system
your body's defense against infectious disease. a collection of organs, tissues, and cells that together perform the vital function of safeguarding the body from a constant barrage of pathogens
secondary immune response
If memory cells are exposed to a previously encountered antigen, they rapidly give rise to new effector cells and memory cells, a process known as the
Third line of defense
Internal adaptive defenses, lymphocytes, antibodies.
Second line of defense
Phagocytic cells, natural killer cells, defensive proteins, inflammatory response.
Internal innate defenses
They are ready with immune cells and defensive proteins should a pathogen make it past the external innate defenses
The chemical signals
attract phagocytic cells, which engulf bacteria and the remains of body cells killed by bacteria or physical injury.
Some barriers of external innate defenses block or filter out pathogens.
-Intact skin forms a tough outer layer that most bacteria and viruses cannot penetrate. -Normal bacterial skin flora -Nostril hairs filter particles from the incoming air. -Ear wax traps pathogens before they can travel too far down the ear canal. -Organ systems that are open to the external environment are lined with cells that secrete mucus, a sticky fluid that traps bacteria, dust, and other particles.
As interstitial fluid circulates
phagocytic cells inside lymphatic tissues and organs engulf the invaders.
chemical barriers in the form of antimicrobial secretions.
-Sweat, saliva, and tears contain enzymes that disrupt bacterial cell walls. -The skin contains oils and acids that make it inhospitable to many microorganisms. -The cells of the stomach produce acid that kills most of the bacteria we swallow.
Antigens
-are molecules that elicit a response from a lymphocyte, -are usually on the surfaces of viruses or foreign cells, and -also include toxins secreted from bacteria, molecules from mold spores, pollen, house dust, and molecules on cell surfaces of transplanted tissue.
clonal selection produces
-cells that will fight the first exposure to an antigen (effector cells) and -cells that will respond to future exposures (memory cells).
allergens
Antigens that cause allergies
clonal selection
At first, an antigen activates only a tiny number of lymphocytes with specific antigen receptors. These "selected" lymphocytes then multiply through cell division, forming a clone of lymphocytes (a population of genetically identical B cells or T cells) with a specific antigen receptor.
First line of defense
Skin, secretions, mucous membranes.
effector cells
Some of the newly produced B cells are short-lived cells that have an immediate effect against the antigen. secrete huge quantities of antibodies. The response peaks about two to three weeks after the first exposure and starts to decline.
thymus
a gland in the chest
The lymphatic system
a network of vessels, tissues, and organs where pathogens and cells involved in innate immunity and adaptive immunity interact with each other to carry out defensive actions.
protruding from the surface of B cells and T cells are
antigen receptors that bind to an antigen. One cell may recognize an antigen on the mumps virus, for instance, whereas another detects an antigen on a tetanus-causing bacterium.
histamine
causes nearby blood vessels to dilate (widen) and leak fluid into the wounded tissue, a process called swelling. The excess fluid heals damaged tissue by diluting toxins in it, bringing it extra oxygen, and delivering platelets and clotting proteins to it that promote scabbing.
cytotoxic T cells
destroy pathogens within body cells. the only T cells that actually kill infected cells.
pathogens
disease-causing agents like viruses and bacteria.
helper T cells
do not directly carry out attacks on pathogens but aid in stimulating both the B cells and the cytotoxic T cells in their responses. respond to infection by stimulating the activity of B cells and cytotoxic T cells
Innate immunity
doesn't change much from the time you are born, and its components attack pathogens indiscriminately. Includes both external and internal defenses.
External innate defenses
keep the pathogen from entering the body and do so in a variety of ways. forms the frontline of your immune system because they prevent infection, as opposed to your body's other defenses, which fight an infection after it occurs.
Lymph nodes
key sites where particular white blood cells called lymphocytes multiply during times of infection
antibodies
may serve as physical barriers that prevent pathogens from entering body cells. also aid in pathogen destruction. The binding of *blank* to antigens on pathogens can also result in clumps that are easily engulfed and destroyed by circulating phagocytic cells.
Immature T cells
migrate via the blood to the thymus, a gland in the chest, where they mature and become specialized. Must be primed.
inflammatory response
often makes infected areas red, swollen, painful, and warm to the touch. Injured cells of damaged tissues release chemicals that trigger various internal innate defenses.
antigen receptors on T cells
only recognize fragments of antigens, and the fragments must be displayed, or presented, on the surface of body cells by special proteins before T cells are activated.
Natural killer (NK) cells
recognize virus-infected and cancerous body cells
Damaged cells
release chemical signals that increase blood flow to the damaged area, causing the wound to turn red and warm.
Antigen receptors on B cells
specialize in recognizing intact antigens that are on the surface of pathogens or circulating freely in body fluids.
primary immune response
the first response to an antigen
The two main functions of the lymphatic system are
to return tissue fluid to the circulatory system and to fight infection.