asked 10.1k views
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The immune response works much like a team with different players playing their role for a common goal: to rid the body of a pathogen.

Create an analogy that helps explain the roles of the specific and nonspecific responses of the immune system and describe the relationship between the two responses

asked
User Priyamal
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2 Answers

7 votes

Answer:

In a primary immune response, naïve B cells are stimulated by antigen, become activated, and differentiate into antibody-secreting cells that produce antibodies specific for the eliciting antigen.

A secondary immune response is elicited when the same antigen stimulates memory B cells, leading to the production of greater quantities of specific antibodies that are produced in the primary response.

answered
User Arjun Mathew Dan
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7.2k points
4 votes

Answer:

In a primary immune response, naive B cells are stimulated by antigen, become activated, and differentiate into antibody-secreting cells that produce antibodies specific for the eliciting antigen.

A secondary immune response is elicited when the same antigen stimulates memory B cells, leading to the production of greater quantities of specific antibodies that are produced in the primary response

answered
User DCurro
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8.4k points
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