Explain how the immune system achieves all of the following.
- Provides an immediate nonspecific immune response
- Activates T and B cells in response to an infection
- Responds to a later exposure to the same infectious agent
- Distinguishes self from nonself
2. T and B cells
are lymphocytes, meaning that they are tailored to certain pathogens. However, it isn’t the pathogens they react
to, but rather the antigens, or molecules, of the pathogens. Their receptors recognize specific antigens
and bind to them, but these lymphocytes can only recognize one antigen each. Before they find their specific pathogen,
these cells are considered naïve. B
cells are responsible for the humoral immune response, which means they are
responsible for producing antibodies.
When naïve B cells first encounter an antigen, they engulf it, digest
it, and display fragments of it on their surfaces. T cells then bind to the B cells in order to
release cytokines, which then help the B cells retain memory of the antigen as
a plasma cell or memory cell. Next,
these plasma cells create antibodies that react to the same antigen that the B
cell initially engulfed. Whereas plasma
cells are only temporary, plasma cells can last a lifetime and initiate an
immediate immune response to the antigen that created them. T cells are activated in generally the same
way. Helper T cells, on the other hand,
do not actually destroy pathogens.
Instead they create chemical signals in order to help activate T cells
and help them to activate B cells. When
the pathogen is cleared from the body, these helper T cells either die or
become memory cells. Cytotoxic T cells
destroy all damaged cells, whether they be cancerous or infected by a virus. These cells quickly reproduce in order to
create a swarm that can combat against their specific antigen. When the pathogen has been removed (these T
cells are kamikazes, dying when they destroy their pathogens), the T cells die
off or become memory cells. Regulatory T
cells mandate the entire process.
3. After T and B
cells have been activated to a pathogen, their body becomes immune to it,
either actively or passively. Active
immunity is when the memory cells are left behind for a specific pathogen, so
the pathogen has a harder time re-infecting the body. Immunization can also lead to active immunity
by exposing the body to a dead or weakened form of the pathogen so the body can
recognize it without ever getting sick.
Passive immunity is when the body receives antibodies, as opposed to
creating them, for a certain pathogen.
This only lasts as long as the antibodies are alive in body fluids.
4. T cells and B
cells are programmed to respond to certain antigens. Since body, or “self” cells do not have
molecules that read as foreign, the immune system does not have a problem. When “non-self” pathogens enter the body,
these cells recognize their foreign antigens and react to them as a
threat. Sometimes, T and B cells react
to non-harmful foreign substances, called allergens, and create an allergic
response to them. In rarer cases, the
immune system mistakes “self” for “non-self,” and begins to attack the body, in
what is called an auto-immune disease.
References:
Quick, Kevin, Holly Kiamanesh, Rosie Montague, Jean Brainard, Barbara Akre, and Douglas Wilkin. The Webb Schools Biology Textbook. N.p.: CK-12, Flexbook, 2012. Print.