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Immune System and Disease Chapter 31
43

Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Jan 11, 2022

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Page 1: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Immune System and Disease

Chapter 31

Page 2: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

PATHOGENS AND HUMAN ILLNESS 31.1

Page 3: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Key Concept

• Germs cause many diseases in humans

Page 4: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Germ Theory

• Microogranisms (microscopic particles) cause certain diseases – proposed by Louis

Pasteur – led to rapid

advances in understanding disease

Page 5: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Koch’s Postulates

• Support the germ theory

• Disease-causing agents are called pathogens

Page 6: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Pathogens

• Many different types

• Bacteria are single-celled organisms. – cause illness by

destroying cells

– release toxic chemicals

Page 7: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Pathogens

• Viruses: – genetic material

surrounded by a protein coat

– force host cells to make more viruses

– very small

Page 8: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Fungi

• Can be multicellular or single-celled – take nutrients

from host cells

– occur in warm and damp places

Page 9: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Protozoa

• Single-celled organisms – use host cells to complete their life cycles

– take nutrients from host cell

Page 10: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Parasites

• Multicellular organisms – grow and feed on a host

– possibly kill the host

Page 11: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Pathogens

• Different pathogens cause common infectious diseases

Page 12: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

How Pathogens Enter the Body

• Can be transferred by direct or indirect contact

• Indirect: – does not require

touching an infected individual

– touching an infected surface

– breathing in infected air

Page 13: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

How Pathogens Enter the Body

• Vectors: – carry a pathogen

and transmit it into healthy cells

• Direct: – requires touching an

infected individual: • kissing

• sexual intercourse

• hand shaking

tick

Page 14: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

IMMUNE SYSTEM 31.2

Page 15: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Key Concept

• The immune system consists of organs, cells, and molecules that fight infections

Page 16: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

The Immune System

• The body system that fights off infection and pathogens

• Many other tissues and systems help the immune system – Skin: a physical barrier to

infection. – Mucous membranes: trap

pathogens entering the body – Circulatory system:

transports immune cells

Page 17: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Immune Cells

• White blood cells (WBC’s) – attack infections inside the body

– phagocytes engulf and destroy pathogens

– T cells destroy infected cells

– B cells produce antibodies

Page 18: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Immune Proteins

• Fight off invading pathogens – Complement proteins weaken pathogen

membranes

– Antibodies make pathogens ineffective

– Interferons prevent viruses from infecting healthy cells

Page 19: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Immunity

• Prevents a person from getting sick – pathogens are destroyed

before sickness

• Passive immunity (occurs without an immune response):

– mother’s milk

– genetics

• Active immunity (occurs with an immune response)

Page 20: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

IMMUNE RESPONSES 31.3

Page 21: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Key Concept

• The immune system has many responses to pathogens and foreign cells

Page 22: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Nonspecific Responses

• Are the same for every pathogen

• Ex: inflammation – blood vessels become leaky

– white blood cells move toward infection and damaged tissue

– characterized by swelling, redness, and pain

Page 23: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Nonspecific Responses

• Fever – blood temperature

increases

– low fevers stimulate white blood cells to mature

– high fevers can cause seizure, brain damage, and even death

Page 24: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Specific Responses

• Caused by immune cells

• Begin with antigen detection – antigens are surface

proteins on pathogens

– each pathogen has a different antigen

Page 25: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Specific Responses (1 of 2)

• Cellular Immunity – uses T cells to destroy infected body cells

Page 26: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Specific Responses (2 of 2)

• Humoral Immunity – uses B cells to produce antibodies

Page 27: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Memory Cells

• Produced by both Cellular and Humoral Immunity – specialized T and B cells

– provide acquired (active) immunity

Page 28: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Foreign Tissues

• Tissue rejection occurs in organ or tissue transplants

• Tissue rejection is the result of an immune respons – immune system detects protein markers on

the donor tissue

– makes antibodies against the donor’s tissue

Page 29: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

IMMUNITY AND TECHNOLOGY 31.4

Page 30: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Key Concept

• Living in a clean environment and building immunity help keep a person healthy

Page 31: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Technology

• Many methods to control pathogens

• Antibiotics and antiseptics cause pathogens to burst

Page 32: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Technology

• Antiseptics: – kill pathogens outside the

body – do not target specific

pathogens • ex: vinegar, soap

• Antibiotics: • kill pathogens inside the body – target one specific bacterium

or fungus – not effective against viruses

Page 33: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Antibiotic Resistance

• Can cause medicines to become ineffective – some bacteria in a population have genes

that make them immune to antibiotics

– these bacteria spread the gene, making the antibiotics useless

Page 34: Immune System and Disease - Weebly
Page 35: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Vaccines

• Artificially produce acquired immunity

• Control pathogens and disease – given to prevent illness

– contain the antigen of a weakened pathogen

Page 36: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Vaccination

• Provides immunity – stimulates a specific

immune response – causes memory cells to

be produced – allows immune system

to respond quickly to infection

– has such a fast response, a person will not get sick

Page 37: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

DISEASES THAT WEAKEN THE IMMUNE SYSTEM

31.6

Page 38: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Key Concept

• When the immune system is weakened, the body cannot fight off disease

Page 39: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Leukemia

• Cancer of the bone marrow – characterized by immature white blood

cells

– causes weakened immune system

Page 40: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

Leukemia

• Leads to opportunistic infections – occurs because

white blood cells cannot fight infections

– if immune system were healthy, would fight these infections

Page 41: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

HIV

• Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is a retrovirus – targets the immune

system – attacks and weakens

the immune system – is transmitted by

mixing infected blood with a bodily fluid

Page 42: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

HIV

• Leads to AIDS – HIV reproduces in

and destroys T cells

– the body cannot replace T cells fast enough

– T cells cannot help in immune responses

Page 43: Immune System and Disease - Weebly

AIDS

• Acquired immune deficiency syndrome – several opportunistic infections

– very low amount of T cells