Immune Response to Fungus, Protozoa and Metazoa Flashcards

1
Q

What are fungal parasites? Include example

A

They are organisms that are saprophytic (they secrete enzymes that digest their food extracellularly before they absorb the nutrients)
Candida albicans

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2
Q

What are metazoans? Include an example

A

They are monophyletic parasites that are generally in the form of worms
Round worm (Wucgereria bancrofti)

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3
Q

What are protozoans? Include an example

A

Protists are anything that are eukaryotes but not an animal, plant, or fungus. They are not monophyletic, they are polyphyelic. Non-photosynthetic protists are called protozoa.
Amoeba

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4
Q

How do parasites enter the cell?

A

Parasites enter the host cell through ingestion or penetration through epithelial barriers

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5
Q

What does the parasite do once it has entered the host?

A

Sneak a mate in in order to produce eggs

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6
Q

Why does the immune system not rely on phagocytosis?

A

Parasites are typically too large to be enveloped

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7
Q

How does the immune system deal with parasites initially?

A

It relies on excretory/secretory antigens to become activated

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8
Q

Where are excretory/secretory antigens from?

A

They are typically intestinal content from parasites or uterine content from female eggs

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9
Q

What detects these antigens?

A

Mast cells

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10
Q

What happens after antigens are detected

A

Mast cell degranulation occurs, releasing histamine which increases blood flow and vascular permeability at the site of infection

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11
Q

What do dendritic cells do with antigens?

A

Internalise and process them and present them on their MHC II receptors

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12
Q

Where do dendritic cells migrate to?

A

Lymph nodes

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13
Q

What happens at the lymph nodes?

A

Dendritic cells present antigens to naive T cells which activates them and drives them to differentiate into Th2 cells

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14
Q

What is the role of Th2?

A

Cause B cells to become plasma cells which produce antibodies such as IgE and IgG

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15
Q

What cytokines do Th2 cells release and what do they do?

A

IL-5 which drives eosinophil proliferation

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16
Q

What do eosinophils release?

A

IL-4 which can generate more Th2 cells in a positive feedback loop

17
Q

What do IgE antibodies do?

A

Bind to the parasite surface and then eosinophils bind to IgE using their FCR1 receptors, which signals the eosinophil to kill the organism bound to the antibody

18
Q

How do eosinophils kill the parasite?

A

Degranulation, includes potent anti-parasitic proteins that damage the parasite and ultimately kill it

19
Q

What is the first line of immune response against fungi?

A

Epithelial barrier that provides protection by excluding microbes and removing them physically

20
Q

How do we recognise fungal danger signals?

A

PAMP-pathogen associates molecular pattern on fungi
PRR-pattern recognition receptor on cells

21
Q

What is the epithelial response to fungal danger signals?

A

Produce antimicrobial peptides like protease inhibitors, enzymes, binding and neutralising proteins, and cytokines and inflammatory mediators which recruit macrophages and dendritic cells to the site

22
Q

What are 3 pattern recognition receptors expressed by dendritic cells?

A

Toll like, C-Type lectin and NOD-like receptors

23
Q

How do dendritic cells respond to spore antigens as opposed to hyphal antigens?

A

Spore-induce IL12 resulting in a Th1-type immune response
Hyphal-IL4 and IL10 which leads to a Th2-type immune response and induce IL1 beta production

24
Q

What happens when IL1 beta is produced?

A

IL17 is produced which recruits neutrophils to the site of infection which phagocytose fungi and stimulate the production of peptides called defensins that target fungal hyphae

25
Q

What happens when IL1 beta is produced?

A

IL17 is produced which recruits neutrophils to the site of infection which phagocytose fungi and stimulate the production of peptides called defensins that target fungal hyphae

26
Q

What is a Th1 type adaptive immune response?

A

Enhances the functions of phagocytic cells via the production of INF-gamma