Difference between revisions of "Adaptive Immunity to Bacteria"
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Revision as of 14:00, 16 August 2010
- The adaptive and innate responses work together to destroy bacteria
- The adaptive response ensures the innate response is carried out efficiently
Humoral
- Complement activation of the classical pathway
Cell-Mediated
- Help for macrophages
- IgG production (T-helper type II cells and B cells) which improves phagocytosis by opsonisation
- Infected macrophages are rescued by T-helper type I cells when phagocytosis and digestion mechanisms fail to eliminate the pathogen
Extracellular Infection
- Complement and phagocytosis
- B cell and T helper type II cell stimulation
- Production of IgM which activates the classical cascade
- Class switching of IgM to IgG which is a good opsonin and targets bacterial Fcγ receptor expressed by macrophages and neutrophils
Vesicular Infection
- The infected macrophage secretes IL-12
- IL-12 stimulates T-helper type I cells which release IFN-γ
- IFN-γ triggers the macrophages to kill the pathogens inside
Also see Immunity to Bacteria