HUMAN BIOLOGY

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sUmmary


section 9.1 The body protects itself
from pathogens with general and specific
responses of white blood cells and
chemicals they release. Inborn responses
provide innate immunity. Responses
after the body detects antigens of specific
pathogens provide adaptive immunity
(Table 9.5). An antigen is a molecule that triggers an immune
response against itself. Chemicals called cytokines help
organize or strengthen immune responses.

ExpLorEon yoUr oWn


174 Chapter 9

section 9.2 T and B cells are stationed
in lymph nodes, the spleen, and other parts
of the lymphatic system. Lymph vessels also
recover water and dissolved substances that
have escaped from the bloodstream and
return them to the general circulation.
section 9.3 The body’s first line of
defense against pathogens includes physical
barriers such as intact skin and mucous
membranes and chemical barriers such as
tears, saliva, gastric juice, and lysozyme
in mucus. Urine and diarrhea help flush
pathogens from the urinary tract and GI tract.
section 9.4 General, innate immune
responses may stop an infection from setting
in. Macrophages are “first responders”
that engulf and digest foreign agents and
clean up damaged tissue. Complement
proteins bind to pathogens and kill them by
inserting membrane attack complexes into
the invader’s plasma membrane. They also
attract phagocytes.
Activated complement and cytokines from macro phages
trigger inflammation, a fast, local response to tissue damage
(Table 9.6). Signs of inflammation include redness, warmth,
and pain. Chemical signals triggered by infection can cause
a fever.

The photograph in Figure 9.23 shows a reaction to a skin test for
tuberculosis. For this test, a health care worker scratches a bit of TB antigen
into a small patch of a patient’s skin. In people who have a positive reaction to
the test, a red swelling develops at the scratch site, usually within a day or two.
Even in a person with no medical history of the disease, this response is visible
evidence of immunological memory. It shows that there has been an immune
response against the tuberculosis bacterium, which the person’s immune system
must have encountered at some time in the past. Tests for allergies work the
same way.
In many communities, a TB test is required for people who are applying for jobs
that involve public contact, such as teaching in the public schools. To learn more
about this public health measure, find out if the test is required in your community,
where it is available, and why public health authorities believe it is important.

Dr. P. Marazzi/Science Source
Figure 9.23 This skin eruption indicates a
positive reaction to a tuberculosis skin test.

Nonspecific
Barriers
Intact skin; mucous membranes at other body surfaces
Infection-fighting chemicals in tears, saliva, gastric fluid
Resident bacteria that outcompete pathogens
Flushing effect of tears, saliva, urination, diarrhea, sneezing,
and coughing
Innate Immune Responses
Complement system
Inflammation
Fast-acting white blood cells (neutrophils, eosinophils,
and basophils), macrophages
Blood-clotting proteins, infection-fighting cytokines, NK cells

specific
Adaptive Immune Responses
T cells, B cells/plasma cells
Cytokines such as interleukins, other chemical weapons
(such as antibodies, perforins)

Table 9.5 The body’s Three Lines of Defense

Complement Proteins directly kill cells; stimulate lymphocytes
Cytokines Communication chemicals
Interleukins Cause inflammation and fever; cause
T cells and B cells to divide and specialize;
stimulate bone marrow stem cells; attract
phagocytes; activate NK cells
Interferons Confer resistance to viruses; activate NK cells

Table 9.6 some Chemical Weapons of immunity

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