BIOL 3120 Chapter Notes - Chapter 12: Type Ii Hypersensitivity, Type Iii Hypersensitivity, Type I Hypersensitivity

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2 Dec 2013
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Explain what it means to be sensitized to an antigen. Certain kinds of innocuous molecule stimulatean adaptive immune response and the development of immunological memory in predisposed members of the population. On subsequent exposures to the antigen the immune memory produces inflammation and tissue damage that is at best an irritation, and at worst a threat to life. The person feels ill, as though fighting off an infection, when no infection exists. The overreactions of the immune system to harmless environmental antigens are called either hypersensitivity reactions or allergic reactions. Type i hypersensitivity reactions result from the binding of antigen to antigen- specific ige bound to its fc receptor, principally on mast cells. This interaction causes the degranulation of mast cells and the release of inflammatory mediators . Type i reactions are commonly caused by inhaled particulate antigens, of which plant pollens are good examples.

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