Lecture 6 Flashcards

1
Q

Monocytes (Circulating Precursors of Macrophage)

A
  1. Numerous, very small azurophilic granules (lysosomes)
  2. Circulating precursors of Macrophage
  3. Can respond to challenges within the vasculature
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2
Q

Monocytes

A
  1. Macrophage (connective tissues; sentinels)
  2. Inflammatory Macs: M1 vs. M2 (response to infection )
  3. Macrophage (spleen)
  4. Alveolar Macrophage (lung alveoli- air space)
  5. Kupfer Cells ( liver sinusoid- vascular lumen)
  6. Osteoclasts (bone)
  7. Microglia
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3
Q

M1 vs. M2 Macrophage

A
  1. M1: Killing
  2. M2: Healing
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4
Q

Macrophage (Multi-Functional Cell Type)

A

Resident Macrophage
1. Spleen: recycle RBCs
2. Liver: clean up particulates in portal blood
3. Lung: removed inhaled particulate matter
4. Bone: remodel bone

Inflammatory Macrophage: Tissues
1. Destroy invading pathogens
— phagocytosis and digestion
— cytoxic secretions
2. Signal other immune cells via cytokines
3. Present antigens to T-lymphocytes

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5
Q

Macrophage (Mechanisms of Pathogen Recognition)

A
  1. Innate Immune Pathway: PAMP-PRR
  2. Adaptive Immune Pathway: Antibody Opsonization
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6
Q

PAMP (on pathogens)

A

Pathogen- associated membrane

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7
Q

PRR (on innate cells)

A

Pattern recognition receptor

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8
Q

Pathogen Recognition

A
  1. Pathogen-Associated Molecular Patterns
    – classes of pathogens will often express common PAMPS
  2. Recognized by Pattern Recognition Receptors
    – highly conserved
    – germline-encoded
    – constitutively expressed
    – broadly expressed
    — in vertebrates and invertebrates
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9
Q

Dendritic Cell (A professional Antigen Presenting Cell)

A
  1. Highly branched morphology
  2. Reside in peripheral tissues (Sentinel cell)
  3. Branches increase the surface area for interactions
  4. Continuous sampling of interstitial fluids and tissues for antigens
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10
Q

Dendritic Cell (Immature Form)

A
  1. Antigen capture – in the peripheral tissues
  2. Internalizes antigens
  3. Internalizes via phagocytosis, pinocytosis, and receptor-mediated endocytosis
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11
Q

Dendritic Cell (Mature Form)

A
  1. Antigen presentation – in the lymph nodes
  2. Minimal capacity for antigen internalization
  3. Migrate from tissues to lymphoid organs
  4. Process antigens onto the cell surface
  5. Present antigens on surface to T-cells
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