You can create a BEFORE UPDATE trigger that raises an error if a "locked" record is about to be updated; since an error occurs before the operation is undertaken, MySQL ceases to proceed with it. If you also want to prevent the record from being deleted, you'd need to create a similar trigger BEFORE DELETE.
To determine whether a record is "locked", you could create a boolean locked column:
ALTER TABLE my_table ADD COLUMN locked BOOLEAN NOT NULL DEFAULT FALSE;
UPDATE my_table SET locked = TRUE WHERE ...;
DELIMITER ;;
CREATE TRIGGER foo_upd BEFORE UPDATE ON my_table FOR EACH ROW
IF OLD.locked THEN
SIGNAL SQLSTATE '45000' SET MESSAGE_TEXT = 'Cannot update locked record';
END IF;;
CREATE TRIGGER foo_del BEFORE DELETE ON my_table FOR EACH ROW
IF OLD.locked THEN
SIGNAL SQLSTATE '45000' SET MESSAGE_TEXT = 'Cannot delete locked record';
END IF;;
DELIMITER ;
Note that SIGNAL was introduced in MySQL 5.5. In earlier versions, you must perform some erroneous action that causes MySQL to raise an error: I often call an non-existent procedure, e.g. with CALL raise_error;
I cannot create an additional column on this table, but the row has a unique id in one of the columns, so how would I do this for that scenario?
In this case, you could do without the locked column and instead hard-code the test into your trigger; for example, to "lock" the record with id_column = 1234:
DELIMITER ;;
CREATE TRIGGER foo_upd BEFORE UPDATE ON my_table FOR EACH ROW
IF OLD.id_column <=> 1234 THEN
SIGNAL SQLSTATE '45000' SET MESSAGE_TEXT = 'Cannot update locked record';
END IF;;
CREATE TRIGGER foo_del BEFORE DELETE ON my_table FOR EACH ROW
IF OLD.id_column <=> 1234 THEN
SIGNAL SQLSTATE '45000' SET MESSAGE_TEXT = 'Cannot delete locked record';
END IF;;
DELIMITER ;