How does the human immune system distinguish friend from foe?

The human immune system is like a superhero team that knows who’s on your side and who’s trying to cause trouble.

Imagine you're playing with toy blocks, and some of them are yours, and some belong to someone else. Your immune system has special detectives called white blood cells who check each block (which represents a cell in the body) to see if it belongs to you or not.

How the Detectives Know Who Is Who

These detectives use something like fingerprint scanners. Every one of your body’s cells has a special label, kind of like a sticker that says “I belong to Elipedia.” The immune system looks for these labels. If a cell has the label, it's considered a friend, no action needed.

But if a cell doesn’t have the label, or worse, has a label from someone else (like a virus), that’s when the immune system gets excited! It sends in more detectives to fight off the intruder and protect your body.

It's like having a security guard at the front door, they check everyone who comes in, and only let people with the right ID pass through.

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Examples

  1. A person gets a cut, and the immune system attacks bacteria but not skin cells.
  2. The body recognizes a cold virus as an intruder but leaves the lungs alone.
  3. When you get a vaccine, your immune system learns to recognize a fake enemy.

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Categories: Biology · immune system· biology· health