How much detail do we need to go into? By the looks of this board at the moment, there is a whole lot we need to understand. Unfortunately, my Biology teacher rushed through this chapter in three lessons and I haven't yet grasped the second and third lines of defence completely. Any help would be really appreciated.
I think knowing different components of the non-specific and specific lines of defence would be sufficient. B and T-lymphocytes; know where they are produced and where they mature (i.e. B-cells are produced and mature in the bone marrow and T-cells are produced in the bone marrow but mature in the thymus). Know the importance of clonal selection/expansion (i.e. the proliferation of particular B-lymphocytes ensures there is a sufficient number of immunoglobulin to counteract the infection by a particular foreign antigen and sustain a humoral response to eradicate this 'foreign' antigen. Know about the lymphatic system; it consists of both B- and T-lymphocytes, lymph (fluid) that travels in one direction. The valves in the lymphatic vessels prevent the backflow of the lymph. The lymph carries various substances through the body to lymph nodes, where B and T-cells are in high concentrations. 2nd line of defence is really just knowing your phagocytes/macrophages, Natural Killer Cells, Interferon, Complement, Cytokines, Inflammation.
Also know about allergies, auto-immune diseases and Rhesus compatibility.
Immunity: can be acquired actively or passively.
* Active immunity can be acquired naturally or artificially [Memory Cells produced]
* Passive immunity can be acquired naturally or artificially [No memory cells produced]
Knowing how to identify each type is quite important. Typically, you'll be asked to identify which type of immunity has been acquired by a particular organism and to justify your selection. You'd then go on to mention for instance whether memory cells were produced or not, whether antibodies were directly administered as a drug or an attenuated pathogen was given and the immune response (Humoral) produced memory cells that retain memory of the foreign, non-self antigen and made the response to the antigen quicker if a second infection by the same antigen were to occur.
Hope this helped!