6.3 and 11.1 Immune System Flashcards

1
Q

Pathogens

A

Bacteria - good or bad (living)

Virus - non living (cannot be treated with antibiotics)

Fungi - living

Protozoa - sickening

Helminths - animal living in you

Prions - non living, kill brain cells

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2
Q

First line defence against pathogens

A

Skin - catch and act as barrier

Stomach - acid kills

Mucus - catches (in mouth. Nose, eyelids, lungs, urinary bladder)

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3
Q

Antibodies

A

Chemicals that take advantage of eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells

Beta lactam example - Penecilin

Beta lactam - 3 carbon 1 nitrogen (attacks specific areas of the prokaryotic cell)

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4
Q

Florey and chain experiments

A

Discovered penecilin repells bacteria such as stephylococcus
Tested on mice

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5
Q

Leukocytes

A

White blood cells
- non specific

Lymphocytes or Phagocytes
L = remember pathogens

P = consume

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6
Q

Immune system response

A
  1. Macrophage
    - consume and display antigens on outside of cell
  2. Antigen
    - pieces of pathogen displayed on antigen representing cell
  3. Interlukin 1
    - chemical produced by T Helper cells, causes Interlukin 2 to be produced
  4. Interlukin 2
    - Activates B Cells and cytotoxic T cells
  5. Cytotoxic T cells
    - specific immune response
    - Tells infected cells to die (apoptosis)
  6. B cells
    - copies itself
    - turns into plasma or memory B cells
    - plasma cells produce antibodies
    - Memory B cells gives immunity to pathogens we’ve had in the past by remembering them
  7. Antibodies
    - aid the destruction of pathogens by:
    - mark pathogens for macrophages to engulf with endocytosis and display them as antigens
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7
Q

Blood clotting

A

Prothrombin forms thrombin

Thrombin transforms fibrinogen into fibrin

Fibrin blocks blood cells and platelets to form a blood

Enzyme plasmin breaks down hard clot while wound heals

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8
Q

Hybridoma

A

Used in pregnancy

  1. Inject antigen into animal
  2. Plasma cells are produced
  3. Tumour and plasma cells fuse
  4. Hybridoma cells form
  5. Monoclonal antibodies are produced
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9
Q

Vaccines

A

Contain weak strains of the pathogen (can’t reproduce in body bc too weak)

Immune system produces B cells

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10
Q

Coronary thrombus

A

Caused from coronary heart disease

Heart can’t get oxygen and nutrients

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11
Q

Histamine

A

Produced by white blood cells

Cause allergic reactions

Causes capillaries to open allowing WBC to go to site

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12
Q

Effects of HIV on the immune system and methods of transmission.

A

Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)

Effects
- specifically targets the helper T lymphocytes which regulate the adaptive immune system
- Causes infected helper T cells reproduce
- begins to spread, destroying the T lymphocytes in the process
- With a reduction in the number of helper T cells, antibodies are unable to be produced, resulting in a lowered immunity

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13
Q

Lymphocytes

A

B Lymphocytes are activated by T lymphocytes in mammals.

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