National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
  National Institutes of Health
NIAID Home Health & Science Research Funding Research News & Events Labs at NIAID About NIAID

Immune System
 What is the Immune System
 Self and Nonself
 Structure
 Immune Cells and Their Products
 Immune Response
 Immunity: Natural and Acquired
 Disorders
 Transplants
 Nervous System
 Research Frontiers


Immune System

What is the Immune System?

The immune system is a network of cells, tissues, and organs that work together to defend the body against attacks by “foreign” invaders. These are primarily microbes—tiny organisms such as bacteria, parasites, and fungi that can cause infections. Viruses also cause infections, but are too primitive to be classified as living organisms. The human body provides an ideal environment for many microbes. It is the immune system’s job to keep them out or, failing that, to seek out and destroy them.

When the immune system hits the wrong target, however, it can unleash a torrent of disorders, including allergic diseases, arthritis, and a form of diabetes. If the immune system is crippled, other kinds of diseases result.

The immune system is amazingly complex. It can recognize and remember millions of different enemies, and it can produce secretions (release of fluids) and cells to match up with and wipe out nearly all of them.

The secret to its success is an elaborate and dynamic communications network. Millions and millions of cells, organized into sets and subsets, gather like clouds of bees swarming around a hive and pass information back and forth in response to an infection. Once immune cells receive the alarm, they become activated and begin to produce powerful chemicals. These substances allow the cells to regulate their own growth and behavior, enlist other immune cells, and direct the new recruits to trouble spots.

Although scientists have learned much about the immune system, they continue to study how the body launches attacks that destroy invading microbes, infected cells, and tumors while ignoring healthy tissues. New technologies for identifying individual immune cells are now allowing scientists to determine quickly which targets are triggering an immune response. Improvements in microscopy are permitting the first-ever observations of living B cells, T cells, and other cells as they interact within lymph nodes and other body tissues.

In addition, scientists are rapidly unraveling the genetic blueprints that direct the human immune response, as well as those that dictate the biology of bacteria, viruses, and parasites. The combination of new technology and expanded genetic information will no doubt reveal even more about how the body protects itself from disease.

Bacteria: streptococci
Bacteria: streptococci
Virus: herpes virus
Virus: herpes virus
Parasite: schistosome
Parasite: schistosome
Fungus: penicillium mold
Fungus: penicillium mold

back to top


The print version is available: Understanding the Immune System: How It Works (PDF). All artwork is by Jeanne Kelly and may not be repurposed.

Glossary

Look up definitions to help you understand the immune system.

See Also

Autoimmune Lymphoproliferative Syndrome (ALPS)

Top 10 NIAID Science Advances, 2007-2008 (PDF)

Related Links

The Immune System from the National Cancer Institute

E-mail Icon E-mail this page
Print Icon Print this page
Plug-ins and Viewers
To open PDFs on this page, download and install the Adobe Acrobat Reader.

Glossary

Look up definitions to help you understand the immune system.

See Also

Autoimmune Lymphoproliferative Syndrome (ALPS)

Top 10 NIAID Science Advances, 2007-2008 (PDF)

Related Links

The Immune System from the National Cancer Institute