Lecture 7
Lecture 7
Lecture 7
Adaptive immunity
• Specificity
• Adaptiveness
• Memory
Specificity
• Specificity is the ability to discriminate among
different molecular entities and to respond
only to those uniquely required, rather than
making a random, undifferentiated response.
Adaptiveness
• Adaptiveness is the ability to respond to previously
unseen molecules that may in fact never have naturally
existed before on earth.
• Discrimination between self and nonself is a cardinal
feature of the specificity of the immune response; it is
the ability to recognize and respond to molecules that
are foreign (nonself) and to avoid making a response to
those molecules that are self
Memory
• Memory, a property shared with the nervous
system, is the ability to recall previous contact
with a foreign molecule and respond to it in a
learned manner, that is, with a more rapid and
larger response.
• Another term often used to describe
immunologic memory is anamnestic response.
Adaptive Immune Response
The adaptive immune system uses the following strategies
to combat the majority of microbes:
• Secreted antibodies bind to extracellular microbes,
block their ability to infect host cells, and promote their
ingestion and subsequent destruction by phagocytes.
• Phagocytes ingest microbes and kill them, and helper T
cells enhance the microbicidal abilities of the
phagocytes.
Cont.
• Helper T cells recruit leukocytes to destroy
microbes and enhance epithelial barrier
function to prevent the entry of microbes.