Let's imagine for a minute that you found yourself in the somewhat unfavorable position of having been bitten by a venomous snake.
Now, to treat that, you might get injected with anti-venom, which is the serum, or just the liquid part of blood and it’s had the coagulation proteins removed, and it comes from another animal, like a mouse, and that mouse has already encountered that particular venom and so it’s developed antibodies against it. These antibodies can bind to the venom molecules and render them harmless.
Now normally that's the end of that, but in serum sickness, your immune system actually mounts an attack against the foreign serum. It’s just like attacking a friendly police officer that’s trying to help you out. Serum sickness is a type III hypersensitivity reaction, which means that it’s mediated by immune complexes, which are combinations of antibodies and soluble antigens, in this case the antigens are the foreign antibodies in the serum.
Now normally, antibodies, which are sometimes called immunoglobulins, are produced by plasma cells, which are fully mature and differentiated B cells. B cells have multiple IgM antibodies on their surface and they act like receptors. When an antigen binds to two of these receptors it’s called cross-linking. This triggers the B cell to take in the antigen, break it all apart, and present a piece on the surface on a protein called MHC class II, which stands for major histocompatibility complex class II. Nearby T helper cells can then bind to the MHC class II protein via their T cell receptor, this happens along with costimulatory molecule CD4.
The B cell’s CD40 also binds to the T cell’s CD40 ligand, and that causes the T cell to release cytokines, which then results in B cell activation and class switching, or isotype switching. This means that it changes from producing IgM antibodies to producing IgG antibodies instead.