Il sistema immunitario di Stefania Artigiani (stefania.artigiani@libero.it), Annalisa Balanzoni (a.balanzoni@virgilio.it), Alessandra Bosia (ventiene@libero.it)

THE IMMUNE SYSTEM CELLS

White Blood Cells or Leukocytes

(cellules de l’immunitè/globuli bianchi/células linfoides) [E1], [E2], [F1], [I]

Leukocytes use the blood for transport from the bone marrow to their major sites of activity. The majority of the functions of white blood cells takes place when they leave the circulation to enter the tissues. The total number of leukocytes in the peripheral blood is normally 4.0-11.0 x 109/liter.
There are five main types of white blood cells; their names and relative proportions in circulation are as follows:
Neutrophils 40-75%
Eosinophils 5%
Basophils 0,5%
Lymphocytes 20-50%
Monocytes 1-5%
If there is a requirement for increased activity of any one cell type in the peripheral tissues, the number and proportion of that cell type rises accordingly.
Neutrophils, eosinophils and basophils are known as granulocytes because their cytoplasm contains prominent granules. Lymphocytes and monocytes are found mainly in tissues such as lymph nodes and spleen. In the tissues, monocytes transform into macrophages and basophils become mast cells.

Monocytes (monocytes/monociti/monocitos)
Monocytes are the blood and bone marrow-located precursors of macrophages found in tissues and lymphoid organs. Monocytes are large phagocytic cells (cellules phagocytaires /cellule fagocitarie/células fagocitarias). Monocytes respond chemotactically to the presence of necrotic material, invading micro-organisms and inflammation (infiammation/infiammazione/inflamación), and leave the blood to enter the tissues, where they are called macrophages (macrophages/macrofagi/macrófagos). When activated, macrophages differentiate to serve specialized roles:
- phagocytosis (ingestion and destruction of foreign material) [E]
- secretion of cytokines (cytokines/citochine/citoquinas) [E], [F], [I]
- APCs (antigen-presenting cells) [E]

Granulocytes (granulocytes/granulociti/granulocitos)
- Neutrophils (neutrophiles/neutrofili/neutrófilos) Neutrophils are the most abundant of the circulating white cells. They circulate in a resting state but, with appropriate activation, leave the blood and enter tissues where they become highly motile, phagocytic cells [E1], [E2]. Their primary function is to ingest and destroy invading micro-organisms in tissues. They play a central role in the early stages of the acute inflammatory response to tissue injury and are the major constituents of pus.
- Eosinophils (éosinophiles/eosinofili/eosinófilos)
Eosinophils are phagocytic cells, with a particular affinity for antigen-antibody complexes, but have less microbicidal activity than neutrophils.
- Basophils (basophiles/basofili/basófilos)
Basophils leave the circulation to form mast cells in the tissues. These cells are characterized by large cytoplasmic granules, which contain enzymes and substances involved in inflammation.

Dendritic Cells (cellules dendritiques/cellule dendritiche/células dendríticas)
Another cell type, addressed only recently, is the dendritic cell. Dendritic cells, which also originate in the bone marrow, function as antigen presenting cells (APC). In fact, the dendritic cells are more efficient APCs than macrophages. These cells are usually found in the structural compartment of the lymphoid organs such as the thymus, lymph nodes and spleen. However, they are also found in the bloodstream and other tissues of the body. It is believed that they capture antigens or bring them to the lymphoid organs where an immune response is initiated. Of particular interest is the recent finding that dendritic cells bind high amount of HIV, and may be a reservoir of virus that is transmitted to T helper cells during an activation event.

Lymphocytes (lymphocytes/linfociti/linfocitos)
Lymphocytes are responsible for generating specific immune responses. There are three main types of lymphocytes: T cells, B cells and NK cells. They are responsible for immune surveillance, constantly sampling their environment for foreign material. When this is found, lymphocytes turn into active cells, mediating the immune responses, particularly in specialized lymphoid tissues.
- B cells mature into “plasma cells”, the major function of which is the production of antibodies (anticorps/anticorpi/anticuerpos) in response to foreign proteins of bacteria, viruses, and tumor cells. Antibodies are specialized proteins that specifically recognize and bind to one particular protein. Antibody production and binding to a foreign substance or antigen, often is critical as a means of signalling other cells to engulf, kill or remove that substance from the body.
- Different subsets of T cells have different roles. The T helper subset is a coordinator of immune regulation. The main function of the T helper cell is to enhance immune responses by the secretion of specialized factors that activate other white blood cells to fight off infection. The cytotoxic T subset is important in directly killing certain tumor cells, viral-infected cells and sometimes parasites. The T suppressor subset is fundamental in down-regulating the immune response, once infection has been fought.
- Natural killer (NK) cells have the morphology of large granular lymphocytes in the peripheral blood, but they can also be present in the spleen. They have the ability to kill tumor cells and viral-infected cells by attaching to the glycoproteins on the surfaces and lysing them (i.e. cause to burst).

   3/11   

Approfondimenti/commenti:

    Nessuna voce inserita

Inserisci approfondimento/commento

Indice percorso Edita
Edurete.org Roberto Trinchero