schema what is an antigen? how do b cells and t cells (generally) work to fight antigens? (use page...

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Schema What is an antigen? How do B cells and T cells (generally) work to fight antigens? (use page 936)

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Schema

• What is an antigen?

• How do B cells and T cells (generally) work to fight antigens? (use page 936)

Surfaces of T cells and B cells

• Small portions of antigens called epitopes can bind to the antigen binding sites

• All antigen receptors on a lymphocyte are the same (identify the same epitope)

T cells and B cells

• Once host cells present antigens, T cells can recognize antigens

• Cytotoxic T cells – use toxic gene products to kill infected cells

• B cells are antigen-presenting cells because they display antigens for recognition by Cytotoxic T cells or Helper T cells

How can acquired immune response be so effective? • Body contains an enormous variety of antigen receptors and

only a small fraction are specific to epitopes

• The binding of an antigen receptor to its specific antigen initiates events that activate the lymphocyte

• Activated B cells or T cells amplify response by dividing several times – Clonal selection Figure 43.14

• Effector cells

• Memory cells

Primary vs. Secondary immune response

• What is the difference between the primary and secondary immune responses? Why does the secondary response happen so much more quickly in an individual?

Schema activator1) What is the difference between the humoral immune response and the cell-mediated immune response?

2) Observe Figure 43.16. What differences do you notice between the two responses? What is necessary for both to occur?

Acquired immunity

Humoral immune responseActivation and clonal selection of effector B cells (secrete antibodies)

Cell-mediated immune responseActivation and clonal selection of cytotoxic T cells (identify and destroy target cells)

What is the role of the helper T cells?

Helper T Cells

• Helper T cells are activated when they come in contact with antigen presenting cells• They reproduce and cells differentiate into activated

helper T cells and memory helper T cells• Activated helper T cells secrete cytokines that stimulate

the activation of nearby B cells and cytotoxic T cells

What are cytokines?Proteins that recruit and activate lymphocytes

T cells vs. B cells

Observe Figures 43.18 and 43.19

• How do cytotoxic T cells kill target cells?

• Do B cells kill cells? How do they respond to pathogens?

Antibodies• Activated B cells can produce thousands of plasma cells, which

each secrete ~2,000 antibodies every second for 4-5 day life span

• Most antigens contain multiple epitopes, so multiple B cells are activated (producing different plasma cells different antibodies)

• Classes of antibodies – Figure 43.20

• How role of antibodies in immunity – Figure 43.21

• Homework – How are monoclonal antibodies used in medicine?