Thursday, 25 May 2023

Innate Immunity vs Adaptive Immunity — A Complete Guide

The immune system is the body’s defense mechanism against pathogens such as bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites. It consists of two major components:

Innate Immunity (Non-specific immunity)
Adaptive Immunity (Specific immunity)

These two systems work together to protect the body from infections.

1. What is Innate Immunity?

Innate immunity is the first line of defense and is present from birth. It acts immediately when a pathogen enters the body.

Features of Innate Immunity:

·         Present naturally at birth

·         Non-specific (acts against all pathogens in the same way)

·         Fast response (minutes to hours)

·         No memory of previous infection

·         Does not improve with repeated exposure

Components of Innate Immunity:

Physical Barriers

Chemical Barriers

Cellular Defenses

Skin

Stomach acid

Macrophages

Mucus membranes

Lysozyme in tears

Neutrophils

Cilia in respiratory tract

Saliva

Natural Killer (NK) cells

Example:

If bacteria enter through a cut, neutrophils and macrophages attack them immediately.

2. What is Adaptive Immunity?

Adaptive immunity develops after exposure to a pathogen and is highly specific.

Features of Adaptive Immunity:

·         Not present at birth (develops over time)

·         Highly specific to each pathogen

·         Slow response (days to weeks)

·         Has immunological memory

·         Stronger response on second exposure

Components of Adaptive Immunity:

Type of Immunity

Cells Involved

Function

Humoral immunity

B cells

Produce antibodies

Cell-mediated immunity

T cells

Destroy infected cells

Example:

After chickenpox infection, the body remembers the virus and prevents future infection.

Difference Between Innate and Adaptive Immunity (Table)

Feature

Innate Immunity

Adaptive Immunity

Presence

Present at birth

Develops after exposure

Specificity

Non-specific

Highly specific

Speed

Immediate

Slow

Memory

No memory

Has memory

Cells involved

Macrophages, Neutrophils, NK cells

B cells, T cells

Antibodies

Not involved

Involved

Example

Skin barrier

Vaccination response

 

How Innate and Adaptive Immunity Work Together

1.     A pathogen enters the body

2.     Innate immunity attacks first

3.     If not destroyed, adaptive immunity is activated

4.     B and T cells eliminate the pathogen

5.     Memory cells are formed for future protection

Role of Vaccines

Vaccines work by stimulating adaptive immunity without causing disease. They create memory cells, so the body can fight infection quickly in the future.

Short Exam Notes (For Quick Revision)

Innate = fast, non-specific, no memory
Adaptive = slow, specific, has memory
Both are essential for survival
Vaccines mainly target adaptive immunity

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