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Twenty Second
Annual Darwin College Lecture Series
2007
Lecture 7 : 2 March
IMMUNOLOGICAL SELF
Philippa Marrack
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Denver, Colorado
Abstract
The immune response protects individuals against infections.
In order to do this effectively the immune system must be able to
distinguish between invading organisms and its own host, attacking the
former whilst leaving the latter unharmed. This is not such an easy
matter given that invading organisms occur in many forms, as viruses,
bacteria, yeasts, worms and so on and that the invaders are constantly
mutating to avoid attack by their potential hosts. Given the
difficulty of the task it is not surprising that the immune system has
evolved many ways to distinguish between invaders and its own host.
The mechanisms used fall into two classes. One class involves
recognition of features of the invader which are not present on the
host. If this type of recognition occurs, the target is destroyed.
Another class involves recognition of features of the host which are
not present on the invader. If this type of recognition occurs, the
immune response is inhibited and the target is not destroyed. Thus
the immunologic self is defined in two ways, either by the absence of
something foreign and/or by the presence of something familiar.
The lectures are given at 5.30 p.m. in The Lady Mitchell Hall,
Sidgwick Avenue, with an adjacent overflow theatre with live TV
coverage. Each lecture is typically attended by 600 people so you
must arrive early to ensure a place.
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