Immune System

Terms & Definitions


The innate immune response is the body’s first, fast, general defense against any invader. It is non-specific, meaning it does not target a specific germ, and it is always ready. The specific (adaptive) immune response is slower at first, but it targets specific invaders. It uses specialized cells (like B and T cells) that remember and attack only the exact germ that caused the infection.
In the immune system, „self“ means the body’s own healthy cells and materials. The immune system knows not to attack these. Non-self“ means anything foreign—like bacteria, viruses, or anything that doesn’t naturally belong in your body. The immune system is trained to recognize and attack non-self things.
Found on all body cells (except red blood cells). Shows „self“ or infected signals to the immune system. If a cell is infected, MHC I shows pieces of the invader to killer T cells (CD8+ T cells), which then destroy the infected cell. MHC II is found only on special immune cells (like macrophages, dendritic cells, and B cells). Shows pieces of non-self (foreign invaders) that they've eaten to helper T cells (CD4+ T cells). This helps activate the immune response.
Humoral response involves B cells and antibodies. It fights pathogens in body fluids (like blood or lymph). B-cells produce antibodies that stick to invaders (like bacteria and viruses) to block or destroy them. Cellular response involves T cells, especially killer T cells. It fights infected cells or abnormal cells (like virus-infected or cancer cells). T cells directly destroy those infected cells.
Primary response happens the first time your body encounters a new germ. It is slower and takes a few days to build up antibodies. During this time the body is learning to fight that specific invader. You might feel sick while this is happening. Secondary response happens when your body sees the same germ again. It is faster and stronger because of memory cells (from B and T cells). You might not even feel sick.
The activation phase is when the immune system detects a threat (like a virus or bacteria). Antigen-presenting cells (like dendritic cells) show the invader to B cells and T cells that get activated and start multiplying. The effector phase is when the activated immune cells go into action. B cells make antibodies and Killer T cells destroy infected cells. The body is now fighting back and removing the invader.

activation phase and effector phase, monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies, antibody and receptor, antibody and antigen, heavy chain and light chain, active and passive immunization, B- and TLymphocytes