EXAM 4 P2 Flashcards

1
Q

B cell receptor proteins

A

how B cells express antibodies on their surface

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2
Q

what happens if the B cell receptor binds a foreign antigen

A

it is taken up and expressed on the cell surface in the context of a MHC 2 complex

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3
Q

first check

A

uptake and degradation of the pathogen

first check is that it’s a non-self antigen

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4
Q

second check

A

done by TH2 cells that release cytokines
the B cell now multiplies, with some differentiating into plasma cells
job is to breakout lots of antibodies and release them into the body.

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5
Q

what are cytokines

A

molecules that activate the B cell and say it’s correct in finding the antigen (aids with plasma formation)
released by TH2 cells

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6
Q

TH2 cells

A

recognize the B cell that is expressing a foreign antigen in the class 2 MHC.
release cytokines in response
innate response is immediate with foreign material

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7
Q

about how long does antibody production take

A

2 weeks, vaccines

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8
Q

memory cells

A

remain in the body for several years (long life)
differentiated B cell
able to remember they saw the antigen so if they make contact with it again, it will respond immediately.
they do not need a TH2 to bind the antigen
response is quick (1-2 days)

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9
Q

antibody structure

A

2 heavy chains and 2 light chains
proteins, variable and constant regions, disulfide bonds
IgG, IgM, and IgA

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10
Q

IgG

A

most abundant in the blood and able to cross the placenta

allows a babies immune system to be completely developed and contain antibodies from the mothers blood. high affinity

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11
Q

IgM

A

most common B cell receptor
can form a pentameric structure, the first in the most rapid response (lymph and blood). first plasma cells produced make this form.
low affinity antigen binding, but has many binding sites
bonds are not tight

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12
Q

IgA

A

forms a dimer structure

found in mucus membranes (lungs, mouth, digestive and urinary tract)

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13
Q

neutralizing antibodies

A

block the function of the antigen when directly bound to the antibody.
bind to the toucan protein and inhibit toucan from binding to the cell.
bind virus spike protein to inhibit virus from binding to the host cell

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14
Q

Tc cells

A

recognize virus infected cells

assists in the killing of infected cells when antibodies mark the infected for attack with the Tc

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15
Q

opsonization

A

increased phagocytosis

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16
Q

complement

A

series of proteins the body produces that circulate your blood all the time, interacting with antibody-antigen complexes
cause lysis/destruction of bacterial cells and opsonization

17
Q

how vaccines work

A

first antigen injection has primary response from IgM
boosters activate memory cells
secondary response is IgG, more rapid

18
Q

types of vaccine components

A

whole bacterial cells that have been killed by heating or chemical treatment
whole virus particles that have been killed

19
Q

attenuated cells

A

have a mutation that prevents them from actually causing the disease

20
Q

toxoids (inactivated toxin proteins)

A

proteins that actually cause symptoms of the infection without the toxic proteins activated
anthrax and tetanus vaccine

21
Q

recombinant/synthetic antigens

A

pure proteins (HPV vax) and mRNA (COVID vax)

22
Q

phagocytes role with antigen presentation

A

put fragments into their MHC and present it to cells of the adaptive response (T cells)
TH1 is activated and releases cytokines, causing inflammation
TH2 activates B cells to multiply and produce antibodies

23
Q

host

A

organism that houses a microbe

24
Q

colonization or infection

A

relates to growth of a microbe within the host
colonization relates to non-pathogens
infection relates to pathogens

25
Q

disease

A

an injury or impaired function of the host

a microbe colonizes you but doesn’t cause problems

26
Q

pathogen

A

a microbe that causes disease

27
Q

obligate pathogens

A

only found on the host and must infect the host in order to grow and reproduce

28
Q

opportunistic pathogens

A

commonly found in non-disease states

do not normally cause disease, but can impair host

29
Q

pathogenicity

A

ability of a microbe to cause disease
qualitative
yes or no question

30
Q

virulence

A

measure of the degree of pathogenicity of a microbe
the relative severity of symptoms
quantitative
most gut E. coli have low virulence

31
Q

roles of normal (microbe) flora of the human body

A

competes with pathogens for space and nutrients
produces products that inhibit pathogens
synthesize vitamins for the host (gut)
stimulate development of immune tissues

32
Q

what surfaces do microflora colonize

A

skin surfaces and mucus membrane surfaces

approx. 10^13 human cells and 10^14 bacterial cells