How does your immune system work Emma Bryce

A mosquito lands on your arm,

injects its chemicals into your skin,
and begins to feed.

You wouldn’t even know it was there,
if not for the red lump that appears,

accompanied by a telltale itch.

It’s a nuisance, but that bump
is an important signal

that you’re protected
by your immune system,

your body’s major safeguard
against infection, illness, and disease.

This system is a vast network of cells,
tissues, and organs

that coordinate your body’s defenses
against any threats to your health.

Without it, you’d be exposed to billions
of bacteria, viruses, and toxins

that could make something as minor
as a paper cut or a seasonal cold fatal.

The immune system relies on millions
of defensive white blood cells,

also known as leukocytes,

that originate in our bone marrow.

These cells migrate into the bloodstream
and the lymphatic system,

a network of vessels which helps
clear bodily toxins and waste.

Our bodies are teeming with leukocytes:

there are between 4,000
and 11,000 in every microliter of blood.

As they move around, leukocytes
work like security personnel,

constantly screening the blood,
tissues, and organs for suspicious signs.

This system mainly relies
on cues called antigens.

These molecular traces on the surface
of pathogens and other foreign substances

betray the presence of invaders.

As soon as the leukocytes detect them,

it takes only minutes for the body’s
protective immune response to kick in.

Threats to our bodies are hugely variable,

so the immune response
has to be equally adaptable.

That means relying on many
different types of leukocytes

to tackle threats in different ways.

Despite this diversity, we classify
leukocytes in two main cellular groups,

which coordinate a two-pronged attack.

First, phagocytes trigger
the immune response

by sending macrophages
and dendritic cells into the blood.

As these circulate, they destroy
any foreign cells they encounter,

simply by consuming them.

That allows phagocytes to identify

the antigen on the invaders
they just ingested

and transmit this information
to the second major cell group

orchestrating the defense,

the lymphocytes.

A group of lymphocyte cells called T-cells
go in search of infected body cells

and swiftly kill them off.

Meanwhile, B-cells and helper T-cells

use the information gathered
from the unique antigens

to start producing special proteins
called antibodies.

This is the pièce de résistance:

Each antigen has a unique, matching
antibody that can latch onto it

like a lock and key,

and destroy the invading cells.

B-cells can produce millions of these,

which then cycle through the body
and attack the invaders

until the worst of the
threat is neutralized.

While all of this is going on,
familiar symptoms,

like high temperatures and swelling,

are actually processes designed
to aid the immune response.

A warmer body makes it harder for bacteria
and viruses to reproduce and spread

because they’re temperature-sensitive.

And when body cells are damaged,

they release chemicals that make fluid
leak into the surrounding tissues,

causing swelling.

That also attracts phagocytes,

which consume the invaders
and the damaged cells.

Usually, an immune response
will eradicate a threat within a few days.

It won’t always stop you from getting ill,
but that’s not its purpose.

Its actual job is to stop a threat

from escalating to dangerous
levels inside your body.

And through constant
surveillance over time,

the immune system
provides another benefit:

it helps us develop long-term immunity.

When B- and T-cells identify antigens,

they can use that information
to recognize invaders in the future.

So, when a threat revisits, the cells
can swiftly deploy the right antibodies

to tackle it before it affects
any more cells.

That’s how you can develop immunity
to certain diseases, like chickenpox.

It doesn’t always work so well.

Some people have autoimmune diseases,

which trick the immune system

into attacking the body’s own
perfectly healthy cells.

No one knows exactly what causes them,

but these disorders sabotage
the immune system to varying degrees,

and underlie problems like arthritis,

Type I diabetes,

and multiple sclerosis.

For most individuals, however,

a healthy immune system will successfully
fight off an estimated 300 colds

and innumerable other potential infections
over the course of a lifetime.

Without it, those threats would escalate
into something far more dangerous.

So the next time you catch a cold
or scratch a mosquito bite,

think of the immune system.

We owe it our lives.

一只蚊子落在您的手臂上,

将其化学物质注入您的皮肤,
然后开始进食。

如果不是出现红色肿块

并伴有明显的瘙痒,您甚至都不知道它在那里。

这很麻烦,但肿块
是一个重要信号

,表明
您受到免疫系统的保护,免疫系统是

您身体
抵御感染、疾病和疾病的主要保障。

这个系统是一个由细胞、
组织和器官

组成的庞大网络,可以协调您的身体防御
对您健康的任何威胁。

没有它,您将接触到数十亿
种细菌、病毒和毒素,这些细菌、病毒和毒素

可能会使
剪纸或季节性感冒等小事致命。

免疫系统依赖于数以百万计
的防御性白细胞,

也称为白细胞,

它们起源于我们的骨髓。

这些细胞迁移到血液
和淋巴系统中,

这是一个有助于
清除身体毒素和废物的血管网络。

我们的身体充满了白细胞:

每微升血液中有 4,000 到 11,000 个白细胞。

当它们四处移动时,白细胞
就像保安人员一样工作,

不断地检查血液、
组织和器官是否有可疑迹象。

该系统主要依赖
于称为抗原的线索。

病原体和其他外来物质表面的这些分子痕迹

暴露了入侵者的存在。

一旦白细胞检测到它们,

身体的
保护性免疫反应只需要几分钟就会启动。

对我们身体的威胁是千变万化的,

因此免疫反应
必须具有同样的适应性。

这意味着依靠许多
不同类型的白细胞

以不同方式应对威胁。

尽管存在这种多样性,我们将
白细胞分为两个主要细胞组,

它们协调双管齐下的攻击。

首先,吞噬细胞

通过将巨噬细胞
和树突状细胞送入血液来触发免疫反应。

随着这些细胞的循环,它们会破坏
它们遇到的任何外来细胞,

只需消耗它们即可。

这使得吞噬细胞能够识别它们刚刚摄入

的入侵者身上的抗原

,并将这些信息
传递给第二个主要的细胞群——

淋巴细胞。

一组称为 T 细胞的淋巴细胞
会寻找受感染的体细胞

并迅速杀死它们。

同时,B 细胞和辅助 T 细胞

利用
从独特抗原

中收集的信息开始产生
称为抗体的特殊蛋白质。

这就是抗药性:

每种抗原都有一个独特的、匹配的
抗体,可以

像锁和钥匙一样锁定它,

并摧毁入侵的细胞。

B 细胞可以产生数百万个这样的细胞

,然后它们在体内循环
并攻击入侵者,

直到消除最严重的
威胁。

虽然所有这些都在发生,但
熟悉的症状,

如高温和肿胀

,实际上是
旨在帮助免疫反应的过程。

温暖的身体使细菌
和病毒更难繁殖和传播,

因为它们对温度敏感。

当身体细胞受损时,

它们会释放化学物质,使液体
渗入周围组织,

导致肿胀。

这也会吸引吞噬细胞

,吞噬入侵者
和受损细胞。

通常,免疫反应
会在几天内消除威胁。

它不会总是阻止你生病,
但这不是它的目的。

它的实际工作是阻止

威胁升级到
你体内的危险水平。

通过长期的持续监测

,免疫系统
提供了另一个好处:

它可以帮助我们培养长期免疫力。

当 B 细胞和 T 细胞识别抗原时,

它们可以利用该信息
在未来识别入侵者。

因此,当威胁再次出现时,细胞
可以在它影响更多细胞之前迅速部署正确的抗体

来应对它

这就是您可以
对某些疾病(例如水痘)产生免疫力的方法。

它并不总是那么好用。

有些人患有自身免疫性疾病,

这会诱使免疫

系统攻击身体自身
完全健康的细胞。

没有人确切地知道是什么原因导致它们,

但这些疾病会
在不同程度上破坏免疫系统,

并且是关节炎、

I 型糖尿病

和多发性硬化症等问题的基础。

然而,对于大多数人来说,

一个健康的免疫系统将在一生中成功
抵抗大约 300 次感冒

和无数其他潜在感染

没有它,这些威胁将升级
为更危险的东西。

所以下次你感冒
或抓到蚊虫叮咬时,

想想免疫系统。

我们欠它我们的生命。