Landmark Discoveries

1. Redefining Immunity: The Immune System as a “National Defense System”

If we compare the human body to a country, the immune system is far more than just a “border patrol.” It is an integrated system that includes the functions of an intelligence agency, law enforcement, armed forces, and logistical support.

  • Defense Network: It is composed of physical barriers (skin, mucosa), organs (spleen, lymph nodes), cells (neutrophils, T cells), and countless signaling molecules working together.

  • Coordination: Its complexity lies in the fact that no single component works alone. When a virus invades, signaling molecules first send out an “alarm,” blood vessels dilate to allow white blood cells to reach the site faster, and finally antibodies deliver targeted attacks.

2. Core Mechanism: How Does It Distinguish “Self” from “Non-Self”?

The core intelligence of the immune system lies in recognition. Every cell carries a set of proteins on its surface called MHC (Major Histocompatibility Complex), which functions like a cellular “ID card.”

  1. Scanning: Immune cells (such as NK cells) continuously patrol and make contact with other cells.

  2. Comparison: If the “ID” is abnormal (virus-infected) or missing (cancerous transformation), the immune system immediately triggers a clearance response.

  3. Misidentification: When the recognition system fails and starts attacking normal cells with valid “IDs,” autoimmune diseases such as lupus can occur.

3. Dynamic Balance: Why “Stability” Matters More Than “Strength”

People often talk about “boosting immunity,” but in medical science, homeostasis is the true gold standard.

  • Overreaction (Hyperimmunity): Like law enforcement firing indiscriminately in a crowded city—leading to allergies or even cytokine storms that damage healthy tissues.

  • Underreaction (Immunodeficiency): Like a city in anarchy, where bacteria and viruses can invade freely.

  • System Stability: A healthy immune system can quickly “stand down” after a threat is eliminated and begin cleanup. This ability to fight and then recover reflects the highest level of system performance.

4. Practical Insight: From “Single Metrics” to “System Management”

Based on this scientific understanding, our view of health needs an upgrade:

  • Don’t rely on single supplements: The immune system is a network. Taking only vitamin C is like feeding the police but not equipping them—it cannot fix systemic gaps.

  • Focus on system stability:

    • Adequate sleep: Sleep is the immune system’s “maintenance window,” when T cells bind most effectively to antigens.

    • Emotional regulation: Chronic stress releases cortisol, which acts like “interference noise,” disrupting communication between immune cells.