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The skin is an active element of the
immune system. It is, in fact, the first line of defense against
foreign invaders. More than just a passive protective covering, it
has cells that warn the immune system of invading microorganisms.
Billions of friendly bacteria live on the skin—in some places
nearly 20 million per square inch. Certain ones produce fatty acids
that hinder growth of harmful kinds of bacteria and fungi.
Joining the skin as
a part of the body’s protective covering are the membranes that
line the internal surfaces of the body. These membranes secrete mucus
that traps microbes. Saliva, nasal secretions, and tears contain
microbe-killing substances. Hair-like cilia in the air passages
leading to the lungs push mucus and debris into the throat, where
they can be eliminated by sneezing and coughing. If any invaders
reach the stomach, they are either killed by the acids there, broken
down by digestive enzymes, or trapped in the mucus that lines the
stomach and the intestines. Eventually, they are evacuated along with
other body waste.
However, some alien
organisms are able to breach these outer defenses and enter the
bloodstream and body tissues or fluids. They have invaded the
territory of the big guns of the immune system—the white blood
cells, two trillion strong. Born in the bone marrow—about a million
every second—they emerge to mature and form three distinct
divisions: phagocytes and two kinds of lymphocytes, namely, T cells
(three major kinds—helper, suppressor, and killer cells) and B
cells.
Now, the immune
system may have a trillions-strong army, but each soldier can fight
only one class of invader. During a disease millions of germs can be
generated, and every one of those germs will have the same kind of
antigen. But different diseases, even different varieties of the same
disease, have different antigens. Before the T cells and the B cells
can attack these invaders, they must have receptors that can bind to
their particular antigens. Hence, among the T cells and the B cells,
there must be many different receptors, receptors specific for the
antigens of each and every different disease—but each individual T
cell and B cell has receptors that are specific for only one disease
antigen.
The immune system
is designed to recognize foreign invaders. To do so it generates on
the order of 10 11 (100,000,000,000) different kinds of
immunological receptors so that no matter what the shape or form of
the foreign invader there will be some complementary receptor to
recognize it and effect its elimination. Thus, there are groups of T
cells and B cells that, among them, can match every disease antigen
that enters our body—just as a key fits a lock.
Like locks with
their keyholes, millions of germs with their antigens invade your
body and circulate through your bloodstream and lymph system. Like
millions of keys, your immune cells with their receptors also
circulate there and fit onto the matching antigens of the germs.
Each category of
lymphocytes has its special role to play in the fight against
infection. The helper T cells (one of the three major T cells) are
crucial. They are the ones that orchestrate the various reactions of
the immune system, directing the battle strategy. Triggered by the
presence of enemy antigens, the helper T cells by chemical signals
(proteins called lymphokines) rally the troops of the immune system
and increase their ranks by the millions.
Phagocytes are the
scavengers of the immune system. Their name means ‘eating cells.”
Phagocytes are of two kinds, neutrophils and macrophages. The bone
marrow pours out some one hundred billion neutrophils a day. They
live only a few days, but during an infection, their numbers
skyrocket, increasing fivefold. Each neutrophil may engulf and
destroy up to 25 bacteria and then die, but replacements come in a
steady stream. Macrophages, on the other hand, may destroy a hundred
invaders before they expire. They are bigger, tougher, and live
longer than the neutrophils. They respond in only one way both to
invaders and to trash—they eat them.
When the macrophage
ingests an enemy microorganism, however, it does more than just eat
it. Like virtually all body cells, on its surface it carries the MHC
molecules that identify it as self. But when the macrophage eats a
germ, the MHC molecule draws out and displays a fragment of this
enemy antigen in one of the grooves on its surface. This strip of
antigen then acts as a red flag to the immune system, sounding the
alarm that a foreign organism is on the loose inside of us. By
sounding this alarm, the macrophage is calling for reinforcements,
more macrophages, millions of them! And this is where the helper T
cell comes in. Billions of them are milling around in the body, but
the macrophage must recruit a specific kind. It needs one with the
kind of receptor that will fit onto the particular antigen that the
macrophage is displaying.
Once this kind of
helper T cell arrives and connects to the enemy antigen, macrophage
and helper T cell exchange chemical signals. These hormone like
chemicals, or lymphokines, are extraordinary proteins that come with
a bewildering array of functions to regulate and boost the immune
system’s response to disease germs. The result is that both
macrophage and helper T cell begin reproducing themselves
prodigiously. This means more macrophages to eat more of the invading
germs and more of the right kind of helper T cells to latch onto the
antigens those macrophages will display. Thus the ranks of the immune
forces explode, and hordes of these particular disease germs are
destroyed.
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