| 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. |
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