Pathology 2420A Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Immunoglobulin M, Natural Killer Cell, Adaptive Immune System

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Innate immunity is mediated by cells and proteins that are always present and poised to fight against microbes, being called into action immediately in response to infection. Many pathogenic microbes have evolved to overcome the early defenses, and protection against these infections requires the more specialized and powerful mechanisms of adaptive immunity. Adaptive immunity is normally silent and responds to the presence of infectious microbes by becoming active, expanding, and generating potent mechanisms for neutralizing and eliminating microbes. The components of the adaptive immune system are lymphocytes and their products. By convention, the terms immune system an immune response refer to adaptive immunity. There are 2 types of adaptive immune responses: humoral immunity, mediated by soluble proteins called antibodies that are produced by b lymphocytes (also called b cells), and cell-mediated (or cellular) immunity, mediated by t lymphocytes (also called t cells). Antibodies provide protection against extracellular microbes in the blood, mucosal secretions , and tissues.

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