L1 Nature of Immunity Flashcards

1
Q

how was smallpox protected against before vaccines

A

if infected with cowpox can survive as they have very similar structure= immunological memory

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2
Q

what is the response to a diverse nature of pathogens

A

range of defence mechanisms

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3
Q

what is the response to a vast range of pathogens

A

vast range of antigen receptors

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4
Q

what is the response to rapid growth of microbes

A

a rapid inflammatory response

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5
Q

what is the the response to minimise host damage

A

regulatory mechanisms

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6
Q

what does an immune response to infection involve

A

recognition and defence

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7
Q

what is recognition

A

locate and identify the pathogen

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8
Q

what is defence

A

repel or destroy the pathogen

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9
Q

what are the cardinal features of immune system

A

specificity
memory
self-discrimination

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10
Q

what is the levels of defence against a pathogen

A

physical barrier
innate immune
adaptive immune

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11
Q

what is the innate immune system like

A

rapid anf generic

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12
Q

what is the adaptive immune system like

A

slower and specific

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13
Q

what are the limitations to physical barriers

A

respiratory tract
urogenital tract
gastrointestinal tract

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14
Q

what are the cells of the innate immunity

A

dendritic
macrophage
mast
granulocytes

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15
Q

what are the granulocyte cells

A
basophil
natural killer cell
complement
neutrophil
eosionphil
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16
Q

what are the cells of the innate and adaptive immunity

A

natural killer T cell

gamma delta T cell

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17
Q

what are the cells of the adaptive immunity

A

B cell

T cell

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18
Q

what is the function of a mast cell

A

rapid inflammatory response - releases histamine

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19
Q

what is the role of a neutrophil

A

neutrophil in blood circulation – recruited to the location then phagocytose

20
Q

what is the role of a macropahge

A

in the tissues - recruited to location then phagocytose

21
Q

how does the innate immune response occur

A

PRRs recognised the PAMPs (only on pathogens)

22
Q

where are PRRs

A

have surface and endosomal recognition as pathogens hide inside cells- intracellular pathogen

23
Q

how is a pathogen phagocytosed and killed

A
chemotaxis
adherence via PAMP
cell activation via PRR
initiate phagocytosis
release degradation products
bacterial killing and digestion
phaolysosome formed
phagosome formed
24
Q

what happens when the complement system is activated

A

complement opsonises pathogen – puts some complement onto the pathogen
when complement opsonising this section binds to activate mast cells vasodilation
complement receptors recognise tags - bind and digest

25
Q

what is the effect vasodilation after complement activation

A

cells circulating in blood can leave blood and go to the tissues to the location of infection

26
Q

what ate the three pathways

A

classical
lectin
alternative

27
Q

what pathways are antibody dependent

A

classical

28
Q

what pathways are antibody independent

A

lectin

alternative

29
Q

what do the pathways lead to

A

activation of C3 and generation of C3 convertase
then activation of C5
lytic attack pathway

30
Q

which pathway activates the complement

A

lectin

31
Q

where does the innate immune system take place

A

in tissue where infection is

32
Q

how are adaptive immune responses activated

A

B and T cells need information on the pathogen – taken to local lymph node
Lymph nodes full of B and T cells with specific receptors on surface
Activated B and T go back to blood circulation

33
Q

how is the B and T cell information taken to the lymph node

A

via the afferent lymphatic system to local lymph node

34
Q

how do activated B and T cells get into blood circulation

A

via thoracic duct

35
Q

what does adaptive cell mediated immunity involve

A

T cells

36
Q

what does adaptive humoral immunity involve

A

B cells

37
Q

where does the T/B cells bind to the pathogen

A

variable region - antigen binding sites

38
Q

what does the T helper cell do

A

T helper CD4 helps other cells clear pathogen from body

39
Q

what does the T CD8 cell do

A

T cytotoxic CD8 kills virally infected cells

40
Q

what is the recognition of innate immunity like

A

rapid- hours
fixed
limited number of specificities
constant during response

41
Q

what is the adaptive immunity like

A

slow -days to weeks
variable
numerous highly selective specificities
improves during response

42
Q

what are the stages of a primary immune response

A
  1. epithelial barrier
  2. immediate local response
  3. innate inflammatory
  4. later adaptive response
43
Q

what are the immediate local responses of the innate

A

complement proteins

macrophages

44
Q

what are the innate inflammatory responses

A

inflammatory mediators from complement, macrophages, mast cells
attract leucocytes and serum proteins (more complement)

45
Q

what is the later adaptive response

A

antigen carriage by dendritic cells to lymphoid tissue
activation of specific T and B lymphocytes and AB production
recirculation to infection site

46
Q

what happens after primary infection - second infection

A

preformed AB and effector T cells in tissues and blood immediate
memory T and B cells faster and bigger responses