Immune system 1
Immune system 2
Immune system 3
100

What are antibiotics for

Bacteria

100

Scientists often call the skin a "physical barrier." In your own words, what does that mean?

The skin blocks pathogens from getting into your body

100

What is the main, overall job of the immune system?

To protect the body from harmful pathogens like bacteria and viruses while removing damaged or abnormal cells to maintain overall health

200

Why do allergic reactions happen?

An allergic reaction happens because the immune system is bored.
200

What is a pathogen

A disease-causing invader, such as a virus or bacteria

200

If your immune system successfully fights off a cold virus, what does it create so that you don't get sick from that exact same virus again?

Antibodies

300

The first line of defence against pathogens

Skin, mucus, sweat, etc

300

Why shouldn't you share water bottles or food utensils with a friend who has a bad cough?

it can transfer respiratory droplets or saliva containing contagious pathogens directly into your mouth, causing you to catch their illness.

300

What do we call it when someone's immune system completely overreacts to something totally harmless, like cat fur or peanuts?

Allergic reaction

400

After an infection is completely cleared, what happens to Memory B cells, and why are they vital for your long-term health?

If you are exposed to the same invader again, these cells immediately activate to produce highly specific, potent antibodies, allowing your immune system to fight off the infection much faster and more efficiently

400

what is an antibody and antigen, and how do they interact with each other?

An antigen is a foreign invader that triggers an immune response, and an antibody is a Y-shaped protein created by the body to perfectly lock onto and neutralize that specific threat

400

How does a vaccine grant a person immunity to a disease without actually making them suffer through the full illness?

A vaccine exposes the immune system to a harmless, weakened, or dead piece of a pathogen, allowing B cells and T cells to safely create "memory" cells that can rapidly destroy the real virus before it causes illness.

500

Disorders of the immune system can include HIV/AIDS. How does HIV specifically affect the immune system, and why does this make the body vulnerable to other illnesses?

HIV weakens the immune system by destroying CD4 helper T cells, which paralyzes the body's ability to coordinate a defense and leaves it vulnerable to otherwise harmless infections.

500

Imagine a specific virus enters the body. Describe the distinct, cooperative roles that Helper T cells and B cells play in neutralizing this threat.

Helper T cells act as the coordinators by recognizing the specific viral fragments and releasing chemical signals that activate B cells, which mass-produce antibodies to neutralize the invader or pathogen.

500

What is the specific job of Killer T cells, and how does their function differ from that of B cells?

While B cells release antibodies to attack free-floating invaders outside of cells, Killer T cells find and destroy your own body cells that have already been infected or turned cancerous.

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