The document provides a high-level overview of the human immune system in 20 minutes for a computer scientist. It describes the immune system as a massively parallel information processing mechanism with over 1 billion users that is incredibly effective at identifying and destroying pathogens. The summary outlines the key barriers a pathogen would face from the innate immune system like skin and macrophages, and then the adaptive immune system involving B cells that secrete antibodies and T cells that destroy infected cells. It explains how the adaptive immune system generates billions of possible antibody and T cell receptors through genetic recombination and selection processes to ensure that almost any foreign protein can be bound and destroyed.
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Lecture Immunology PDF
The document provides a high-level overview of the human immune system in 20 minutes for a computer scientist. It describes the immune system as a massively parallel information processing mechanism with over 1 billion users that is incredibly effective at identifying and destroying pathogens. The summary outlines the key barriers a pathogen would face from the innate immune system like skin and macrophages, and then the adaptive immune system involving B cells that secrete antibodies and T cells that destroy infected cells. It explains how the adaptive immune system generates billions of possible antibody and T cell receptors through genetic recombination and selection processes to ensure that almost any foreign protein can be bound and destroyed.
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Basic immunology in 20 minutes
Joseph Barillari (this part)
John McPhie (cool applications stay tuned) 4 November 2004 acts and graphics unashamedly stolen !rom Jane"ay# $ravers# et al% Immunobiology# & th ed%' (o!meyr% )*n +vervie" o! the ,mmune -ystem.' orrest# (o!meyr% ),mmunology as in!ormation processing.' Pillai# (endric/son# et al% (-$ 012 course notes%# 3i/ipedia%org# 4pl%nasa%gov# etc% 3hat is the immune system5
Biological mechanism !or identi!ying and
destroying pathogens "ithin a larger organism%
Pathogens6 agents that cause disease
Bacteria# viruses# !ungi# "orms# etc%
R e v i e w
s l i d e
t h i s
i s
a l l
i n
t h e
p a p e r . 3hy "ould a computer scientist study the human immune system5
Massively parallel in!ormation processing
mechanism "ith &%2B users7
,ncredibly e!!ective e8ample o! a distributed
system built !rom diverse components "hich are constantly being rene"ed%
May inspire better computer security systems
(stay tuned !or ne8t "ee/)# as it9s
adaptive can train sel! to react to ne" threats
error-tolerant small mista/es are not !atal
self-protecting protects itsel!
R e v i e w
s l i d e
t h i s
i s
a l l
i n
t h e
p a p e r . :oadmap
Many introductions present ,- as a giant parts
list%
3e9ll brie!ly consider it as a set o! barriers# !rom
a pathogen9s perspective%
;isadvantage6 lots and lots and lots o! supporting
details omitted% *s/ <uestions%
*dvantages6 !ast# tailored to hobby=horse
concepts o! immunologically=inspired security%
Namely negative selection# costimulation#
combinatorial > 4unctional diversity# and somatic hypermutation% (Don't as/ <uestions about this line% 3e9ll get to this%) irst line o! de!ense is the innate immune system% ($his "asn9t in (o!meyr%) ,nnate immunity Skin (think firewall) -/in repels nearly everything Pathogens (ubi<uitous) ?ery# very !e" evade innate immunity Not to scale. ?ery !e" penetrate s/in Macrophage ingests > destroys most pathogens (ard=coded detectors !or common pathogenic signatures% :arely# nasty germs can evade the innate immune system% @nter adaptive immunity% *daptive immunity B cells secrete antibodies to attac/ e8tracellular pathogens (Most bacteria) B Bacterium B T cells destroy in!ected cells to eradicate intracellular pathogens% (-ome bacteria# all viruses) T T T ?irus=in!ected cell The colors of the receptors indicate specificity: each can bind to one specific antigen. daptive immunity can only attac! targets that it has prepared for. -uppose you9re a pathogen% Aou9ve avoided the innate immune system% -hould the adaptive immune system give you pause5 3hy "ould one o! these receptors be able to bind to you5 -uppose you9re ne"% *s=yet=unseen% ,mpossible# right5 $ cell development# brie!ly outlined T T -el!=targeted $ cells are deleted (2 slides !rom no") T Breates $ cell receptor by sloppy gene rearrangement% (ne8t slide) T T Prototype cell# moves !rom bone marro" to thymus gland T T Cse!ul# non=sel!=reactive $ cells are released !rom the thymus $ cell receptor ($B:) creation ?0 ?4 ?1 ?2 ?2 ?D ?E ?& ?F ;0 ;E ;2 ;4 J0 J2 JE J4 J2 J& (0) $B: G ? segment H ; segment H J segment% Ienome contains several di!!erent copies o! each% Pic/ one !rom each set% (Combinatorial diversity.) ?& ;4 J0 (2) Join the copies together using a sloppy techni<ue that introduces randomness into the 4unctions% (Junctional diversity.) ?& ;4 J0 (E) ,! you get an in=!rame protein# continue% "rom a fe# do$en %to several do$en& segements for each category %'(D()*& the human immune system creates over +, ++ different antibody receptors. Jane"ay 0E& $ cell re!inement -andidate T cells are e.posed to most of the proteins in the human body. "or presentation( proteins are chopped into fragments and displayed on speciali$ed presentation molecules. T T T J o! sel! peptides bound b i n d i n g
s t r e n g t h $ cells "ith moderate binding strength are retained% $ cells that do not bind to any presentation molecules are allo"ed to die% -trongly autoreactive $ cells are /illed (negative selection) T T $ cells !rom the green Kone are approved T /ummary of the last three slides Aour immune system has a repritoire o! T cells capable o! binding and destroying cells that e8hibit almost any !oreign protein% -uppose you9re a pathogen% Aou9ve avoided the innate immune system% -hould the adaptive immune system give you pause5 3hy "ould one o! these receptors be able to bind to you5 -uppose you9re ne"% *s=yet=unseen% ,mpossible# right5 Wrong! ,t is unli/ely that any intracellular=pathogen=in!ected cell "ill escape binding by a $ cell% $he !irst binding "ill lead to replication o! the bound $ cell and (i! all goes "ell) eventual clearance o! the in!ection% +L# so ,9m toast% But "hat happens i! a $ cell binds a human cell5 ($hey9re moderately autoreactive# right5) 3ill the human cell be lysed5 'ern 'irus *ns"er6 Costimulation $o be activated# a $ cell needs to see both its !irst signal (the target antigen) and a second )DANGER. signal% T -econd (;*NI@:) irst T cell signal receptors $he )DANGER. signal is provided by antigen presenting cells "hen they detect signs o! in!ection (cell lysates# certain cyto/ines# etc%) ,! you haven9t noticed# bold italic means important! $ cells cannot be activated "ithout a )DANGER. signal% ,! a $ cell receives its !irst signal "ithout the second# it may become toleriKed to its target% ,9m an extracellular pathogen% 3hat should , e8pect5 Pierce Pathogen Most pathogens are not sel!=a"are% B cells improve themselves via somatic hypermutation B *ctivation via BM$ collaboration B B B Clonal expansion Somatic hypermutation (random mutation o! BB:) B B ;eleterious mutations B *dvantageous mutations increase secreted antibody binding a!!inity