| Literature DB >> 26695756 |
Abstract
The human body regularly encounters and combats many pathogenic organisms and toxic molecules. Its ensuing responses to these disease-causing agents involve two interrelated systems: innate immunity and adaptive (or acquired) immunity. Innate immunity is active at several levels, both at potential points of entry and inside the body (see figure). For example, the skin represents a physical barrier preventing pathogens from invading internal tissues. Digestive enzymes destroy microbes that enter the stomach with food. Macrophages and lymphocytes, equipped with molecular detectors, such as Toll-like receptors (TLRs), which latch onto foreign structures and activate cellular defenses, patrol the inside of the body. These immune cells sense and devour microbes, damaged cells, and other foreign materials in the body. Certain proteins in the blood (such as proteins of the complement system and those released by natural killer cells, along with antimicrobial host-defense peptides) attach to foreign organisms and toxins to initiate their destruction.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26695756 PMCID: PMC4590614
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alcohol Res ISSN: 2168-3492
FigureOverview of the immune system. Innate immunity encompasses several non-specific protective mechanisms against infection, including physical and physiological barriers, cells (e.g., macrophages and neutrophils) that detect and attack other cells carrying pathogen-associated molecular patterns, and small proteins that signal pathogen invasion (i.e., cytokines and chemokines) or short peptides that directly attach to and restrict microbial pathogens. The adaptive immune system comprises specialized cells (e.g., B and T cells) and proteins (i.e., antibodies) that detect and eliminate specific pathogens and also uses cytokine/chemokine signaling to recruit additional immune cells. Several cells in adaptive immunity (i.e., memory B and T cells) can store immune memory of a pathogenic invasion. The complement system, along with natural killer cells and dendritic cells, straddles both innate and adaptive immunity.
Components of the Immune System
| Innate Immunity | Adaptive Immunity |
|---|---|
| Immune responses are largely non-specific, e.g., via Toll-like receptors (TLRs) | Immune responses specifically target pathogens via its antigens detected by specific immune cell receptors |
| Comprises a variety of defense mechanisms, i.e., physical/physiological barriers, lytic enzymes, reactive oxygen species, isolation of diseased tissues, and cell- and protein-mediated immunity | Involves mainly cell- and protein-mediated immunity |
| Immediate response to pathogenic challenge | Lag time between pathogen detection and response |
| No immunological memory (with some evidence for immune memory in NK cells) | Activation leads to immunological memory |
| Often underlying chronic inflammation in allergies and degenerative diseases (e.g., Alzheimer’s disease, rheumatoid arthritis) | Often underlying autoimmune diseases in which self/nonself recognition is impaired, causing adaptive immune cells to attack the body’s own cells (e.g., in type I diabetes, autoimmune hepatitis) |
| Present in all eukaryotes (including plants, which, however, use different mechanisms and molecules in innate immunity) | Present in jawed vertebrates with emerging evidence of related immune mechanisms in jawless vertebrates and some invertebrates |