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What is Cell Mediated Immunity

Our bodies use antibodies to check fluids between cells, some pathogens are clever enough to hide inside  cells themselves. This is where Cell-Mediated Immunity (CMI) steps in. Unlike humoral immunity (which uses B-cells and antibodies), CMI does not rely on circulating proteins. Instead, it involves activation of specialized cells that hunt down and destroy infected or abnormal host cells.

How Cell-Mediated Immunity Works

The process is a highly coordinated led by T-lymphocytes (T-cells). Since T-cells cannot see pathogens floating freely, they rely on a system of cellular flags called Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) molecules.

1. Antigen Recognition and Presentation

When a virus infects a cell or a macrophage swallows a bacterium, pieces of the pathogen (antigens) are displayed on cell surface via MHC molecules.

2. Key Players

When is CMI Most Important?

Cell-mediated immunity is our primary defense against threats that antibodies can’t reach:

Threat Type How CMI Handles It
Intracellular Pathogens Destroys cells harboring viruses, bacteria (like M. tuberculosis), and fungi.
Cancer Cells Identifies and eliminates mutated host cells before they can form tumors.
Transplanted Tissue Unfortunately, CMI is main reason for organ transplant rejection, as it views new organ as foreign.

Memory

After infection is cleared, most activated T-cells die off. However, a small population remains as Memory T-cells. These cells remember specific antigen for years. If same pathogen tries to invade again, these memory cells trigger a response so rapid and aggressive that you often don’t even feel symptoms second time around.

While CMI is important for health, an overactive cell-mediated response can lead to autoimmune diseases, where the body’s begin attacking healthy, normal tissue.

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