Chapter 15: Innate immunity Flashcards

1
Q

Species resistance

A

-we are naturally resistant to most plant and animal pathogens due to our anatomy and physiology being incompatible with those of the pathogen

ex: lacking certain chemical receptors or pH/ temperature, first line of defense

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2
Q

What does innate immunity mean?

A

First two lines of defenses in your body that are present at birth
-is always active, nonspecific, and rapid, and works against a large range of pathogens
-but humans don’t have innate/natural resistance to a number of pathogens therefore they cause diseases

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3
Q

How many lines of defense/immunity are there?

A

three

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4
Q

What is the 1st line of defense?

A

-defense is composed chiefly of external physical barriers and associated chemicals and processes.
ex: skin and mucous, tight junctions, and acid in your stomach. sweat secretions
-this line of defense is non-specific

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5
Q

What is the 2nd line of defense?

A

-is internal and composed of protective cells, bloodborne chemicals, and processes that inactivate or kill invaders
examples:
-WBC (neutrophils, monocytes, eosinophils ,and basophils)
-fever (temperature)
- interferons (Alpha, Beta)
- inflammatory response
- complement system

** these are all non-specific

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6
Q

What is the 3rd line of defense?

A

-also called adaptive immunity, and is resistance against pathogens that act more effectively upon subsequent infection of same pathogen
examples:
-WBC (lymphocytes, T-cell, B-cells)

** these are specific

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7
Q

lysozyme

A

is an enzyme that destroys the cell walls of bacteria by cleaving the bonds between the sugar subunits of the peptidoglycan wall

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8
Q

What is a differential white blood cell count?

A

measures the percentage of each type of white blood cell (WBC) that you have in your blood

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9
Q

What are the five major types of white blood cells?

A
  1. Neutrophils
  2. lymphocytes
  3. monocytes
    4.eosinophils
  4. basophiles
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10
Q

How to remember the five major types of white blood cells?

A

Never Let Monkeys Eat Bananas

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11
Q

Diapedesis

A

where white blood cells change and travel through intact blood vessels by squeezing between lining cells and travel to other parts of the body

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12
Q

How does phagocytosis help fight diseases/infections?

A

phagocytes engulf and destroy foreign particles in the body

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13
Q

Neutrophiles

A

-makes up 65% of WBC and cane be made without being sick

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14
Q

Steps in Phagocytosis

A
  1. chemotaxis of phagocyte to microbe
  2. Adhesion

3.Ingestion of microbes by phagocytes

  1. Fusion of a series of vesicles including lysozymes

5.killing of microbes by enzymes and other chemicals

  1. elimination (exocytosis)
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15
Q

Interferons

A

-are protein molecules released by host cells to non-specifically inhibit the spread of viral infections
-interfere with viral replication/ progression
-can cause muscle aches, malaise, chills, fever, headache

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16
Q

Type I Interferons (Alpha and Beta)

A

-infected monocytes and macrophages will secrete alpha interferon and fibroblast (undifferentiated cells) will secrete beta interferon
-produced with the infection, and hours later will lead to AVP (anti-viral protein)
-they can act on cells that secrete them, cells infected, and trigger protective steps in neighboring cells

17
Q

Steps for Type I Interferons

A

1.Virus infects cell
2.viral component triggers activation of type I IFN gene
3. If N-a and -B are released and bind to receptors on the same and nearby cells
4. Binding activates genes for antiviral proteins, though AVPs remain inactive at this time
5. Later the infected cell may die releasing viruses
6. If the cell is infected, viral components activate the AVPs
7. Active AVPs degrade mRNA and bind to ribosomes which stop protein synthesis preventing viral replication

18
Q

Type II (Gamma) Interferon

A

-is produced by activated T lymphocytes and natural killer lymphocytes. It regulates the immune system as in its activation of phagocytotic activity
-produced several days after an infection to stimulate WBC and phagocytes

19
Q

complement

A

-a group of serum proteins designated numerically which can result in lysis of a foreign cell
-can be activated in 3 ways

20
Q

What are the three ways complement system can be activated?

A
  1. Classical pathway
  2. alternative pathway
  3. lectin pathway
21
Q

Classical pathway

A

-requires pre-made antibodies (already had the infection)
-antibodies bind to foreign substances called antigens and this binding begins a series of enzyme activities called complement cascade

22
Q

Alternative pathway

A

-activation occurs independent of antibodies
-is activated by endotoxin and/ or foreign glycoproteins and it uses factors B,D and P (properdin) and C3b
-the alternative pathway is useful in the early stages of an infection before the adaptive immune response has created the antibodies needed to activate the classical pathway

22
Q

Lectin Pathway

A

-activation is independent of antibodies
-we produce lectin which binds to mannose, a carbohydrate on the surface of foreign cells to activate the cascade

23
Q

All three pathways lead to what?

A

complement cascade

24
Q

Complement cascade MAC (membrane attack complex)

A
  1. C1 (only found in classical) binds the cell with antibodies (If classical activation)
  2. Activated C1 cleaves C2 –> C2a + C2b and C4 –> C4a + C4b
  3. C2a and C4b form an enzyme that cleaves C3 –> C3a + C3b (opsonization)
  4. C2a + C3b + C4b –> C5 convertase
  5. C5 convertase cleaves C5 into –> C5a + C5b (Inflammation)
  6. chemotaxis and inflammation and C5b + C6, C7, C8, C9
  7. membrane attack complex forms, which puts a circular hole in pathogens membrane

** need to get to C3b by any method, after that pathway is the same in every method

25
Q

The inflammatory response

A
  1. A cut penetrates the epidermis barrier and bacteria invade
  2. damaged cells release prostaglandins, leukotrienes, and histamine
  3. Prostaglandins and leukotrienes make vessels more permeable. histamine causes vasodilation increasing blood flow to the site
  4. macrophages and neutrophils squeeze through walls of blood vessels
  5. increased permeability allows antimicrobial chemicals and clotting proteins to seep into damage tissue but also results in swelling
  6. blood clot forms
  7. more phagocytes move to site and devour bacteria
  8. accumulation of damaged tissue and leukocytes form pus
  9. stem cells repair the damaged tissue, blood clot reabsorbed or falls off
26
Q

Production of a fever

A
  1. chemicals secreted by phagocytes travel in blood to hypothalamus
  2. hypothalamus secretes prostaglandins which reset hypothalamic thermostat
  3. Nerve impulses causes shivering, higher metabolic rate, inhibition of swelling, and vasoconstriction
  4. these processes increase the body temp to the point set by the hypothalamic thermostat