adaptive immune response phases
antigen recognition (antigen presentation)
purpose of antigen recognition
identify and activate the cells that can recognize and bind the antigen from the specific pathogen that is invading
lymphocyte activation
requires a series of cellular interactions (communication) which lead to T-cell and B-cell differentiation and clonal expansion
what does lymphocyte activation include?
purpose of lymphocyte activation
produce a large quantity of immune cells specific to the pathogen in order to stop the invasion
clonal expansion
production of a large quantity of identical cells from the same original cell
elimination of pathogens or non-self perceived antigens
most efficient defenced are unleashed
purpose of elimination of pathogens or non-self perceived antigens
to completely destroy the pathogen that invaded
humoral
plasmocytes produce antibodies that bind to extracellular pathogens
cell-mediated
cytotoxic T-cells destroy cells infected by intracellular pathogens or get activated by antigens presented by APCs
apoptosis of immune cells (contraction)
once pathogen is eliminated, the vast majority of activated lymphocytes undergo apoptosis, and the immune response gradually declines
why do cells undergo apoptosis?
the cells duty is accomplished and most immune cells are not needed anymore and could produce more damage than good, they die off)
apoptosis
programmed cell death that occurs in a way controlled by the cell itself, which generate almost no damage to the surrounding cell
establishment of immunological memory
ex of immunological memory
vaccination
self and non-self recognition
the MHC serves as a self-label, and helps identify and recognize self from non-self-molecules, to ensure the immune system does not attack the host (you)
MHC
display antigenic peptides on surface of cells
- can be recognized by the TCR and its co-receptors (CD4 or CD8) to initiate an adaptive immune response leading to elimination of foreign antigens
classes of MHC molecules
autoimmune disorders
arise when the body’s immune response is unable to differentiate between self and non-self, and the immune system begins to attack its own tissue
antigen presenting cells (APCs)
receptor-mediated endocytosis
an endocytic process in which a cell absorbs external material by invagination of the plasma membrane – relies on receptors specific for the material being absorbed
2 types of APCs
professional APCs
most efficient cells that both present antigens through MHC class II and express co-stimulatory signals to activate Helper T-cells