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- Title
The immune system: a weapon of mass destruction invented by evolution to even the odds during the war of the DNAs.
- Authors
Cohn, Melvin
- Abstract
Living systems operate under interactive selective pressures. Populations have the ability to anticipate the future by generating a repertoire of elements that cope with new selective pressures. If the repertoire of such elements that cope were transcendental, natural selection could not operate because any one of them would be too rare. This is the problem that vertebrates faced in order to deal with a vast number of pathogens. The solution was to invent an immune system that underwent somatic evolution. This required a random repertoire that was generated somatically and divided the antigenic universe into combinatorials of determinants. As a result, it became virtually impossible pathogens to escape recognition but the functioning of such a repertoire required two new regulatory mechanisms: 1) a somatic discriminator between Not-To-Be-Ridded ('Self') and To-Be-Ridded ('Non-Self') antigens, and 2) a way to optimize the magnitude and choice of the class of the effector response. The principles governing this dual regulation are analyzed in the light of natural selection.
- Subjects
IMMUNE system; ANTIGENS; VERTEBRATES
- Publication
Immunological Reviews, 2002, Vol 185, Issue 1, p24
- ISSN
0105-2896
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1034/j.1600-065X.2002.18504.x