BIOL 031 Lecture Notes - Lecture 15: Fluid Balance, Macrophage, Circulatory System

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Describe the innate and acquired immune system and their main functions and characterize the lymphatic tissues, lymphatic vessels, and white blood cells of the immune system. Innate immunity: non-specific action where the body recognizes and destroys certain foreign substances with the same response every time the body is exposed. Inflammation, the apparent red warm, swollen area on the skin is a hallmark reaction of the cytokine-mediated innate immunity. Acquired immunity: specific action where the body recognizes and destroys foreign substances, but the response to them is faster and stronger each time the foreign substance is encountered. There are two characteristics to the acquired immunity: Specificity: the ability to recognize a particular substance. Memory: the ability to remember previous encounters with a particular pathogen, that then leads to a faster, stronger and longer lasting response. Cell mediated immunity: uses contact dependent signalling in which an immune cell binds through receptors to its target cell.

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