Innate Immunity Open Access Articles
The innate
immune system is formed of defenses against
infection that may be activated at once an infectious agent attacks. The innate system is actually created of barriers that aim to stay viruses, bacteria, parasites, and alternative foreign particles out of your body or limit their ability to unfold and move throughout the body. The innate system includes:
Physical Barriers
- Such as skin, the alimentary tract, the tract, the cavity, cilia, eyelashes and alternative hair.
Defense Mechanisms
- Such as secretions, mucous, bile, stomachic acid, saliva, tears, and sweat.
General Immune Responses
- Such as inflammation, complement, and non-specific cellular responses. The inflammatory response actively brings immune
cells to the location of
infection by increasing blood flow to the world. Complement response that marks infectious agents for destruction and makes holes within the semipermeable membrane of the pathogen.
The innate system is often general, or nonspecific, that means something that's known as foreign or non-self could be a target for the innate response. The innate system is activated by the presence of antigens and their chemical properties.
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