Animal Science 320 Lecture 12 Flashcards

Intro to Immunology and Innate Immune System PT 1

1
Q

What is immunology?

A

Is the study of the body’s defense against infection.

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2
Q

What is the Immune System?

A

Basic defense of the body

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3
Q

What is the immune system made of?

A

Composed by specialized cells and organized structures that coordinate defense mechanisms

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4
Q

What does the Immune system protect us from?

A

From harmful pathogens and disease

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5
Q

What happens when the immune system fails?

A

Disease arise

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6
Q

Who is Edward Jenner?

A

Developed the first vaccine against smallpox (18th century)

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7
Q

How did Edward Jenner develop the first vaccine against small pox?

A

By infecting a patient with cowpox and demonstrating that
the patient became immune to smallpox

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8
Q

Who is Louis Pasteur?

A

Demonstrated that infectious diseases are caused
by microorganisms (Germ theory of disease)

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9
Q

How did Louis Pasteur develop the first vaccine against rabies?

A

By attenuating the rabies virus,
making it less harmful

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10
Q

Who is Robert Koch?

A

Did work on tuberculosis that led to breakthroughs in understanding these kinds of diseases and treatments

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11
Q

Who laid the foundation for modern microbiology and the development of antibiotics?

A

Robert Koch

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12
Q

What are components of Mucosal Immune System?

A

Barrier Functions, Innate Immune Stsem, Adaptive Immune System

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13
Q

What does the Mucosal Immune System?

A

Stratify luminal microbes and Minimize bacterial-epithelial cell contact

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14
Q

What is Oral Tolerance?

A

Tolerance towards food antigens and commensal
microorganisms

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15
Q

What is Compartmentalization?

A

Prevent the induction of unnecessary systemic immune
responses

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16
Q

What is a Barrier Function?

A

Intestinal barrier are made up of numerous
different cell types

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17
Q

What types of cells are in the Barrier Function?

A

Enterocytes, Goblet cells Paneth cells, Microfold (M) cells

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18
Q

What are Enterocytes cells?

A

Ensures the uptake of ions, water, nutrients, vitamins and absorption of unconjugated bile salts

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19
Q

What are Goblet Cells?

A

Intestinal mucosal epithelial cells that serve as the primary site for nutrient digestion and mucosal absorption

20
Q

What are Paneth Cell?

A

Found in crypts, produce
anti-microbial compounds

21
Q

What are Microfold (M) Cells?

A

Facilitate the
maintenance of intestinal tolerance

22
Q

One layer of epithelial cells
____ adhered to each other

A

Tightly

23
Q

What is the Junctional Complex

A

Transcellular proteins connected
through adaptor proteins to the
actin cytoskeleton.

24
Q

What is the Mucus Layer of the Farrier Function?

A

Glycoproteins called mucin secreted by
Goblet cells, Protein core with several polysaccharide
molecules attached

25
Q

How many layers of Mucin are there?

A

2

26
Q

What is the outer layer of Mucin?

A

Colonized by microorganisms

27
Q

What is the inner layer of mucin?

A

High concentration of
antimicrobial peptides prevents
microbial colonization known as “Killing zone”

28
Q

Presence of microorganisms close to epithelial
surfaces are recognized by what?

A

APCs via PRRs

29
Q

What do Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) disrupt and how?

A

Disrupt microbial cell membrane by
forming pores

30
Q

What acts as lytic enzymes disturbing microbial
cell membrane?

A

AMPs

31
Q

What are pattern recognition receptors (PRRs)?

A

Several germline-encoded receptors used to recognize different MAMPS

32
Q

What is a Lamina Propria?

A

It is a loose connective tissue that contains several immune cells

33
Q

What are some of the immune cells in Lamina Propria?

A

Antigen-presenting cells
(APCs), T cells and B cells, Innate Lymphoid cells, and other immune mediators

34
Q

What allowed us to study the ecological complexity of the intestinal microbiota and its
impact on host physiology.

A

Culture-independent techniques (NGS)

35
Q

Microbial cells in intestine surpass human cells by a factor of

A

10

36
Q

Microbial genome is ___ more extensive than human
genome

A

100x

37
Q

Metabolic

A

Vitamin B and K, SCFA

38
Q

Structural

A

Promote epithelial cell proliferation mucin
production

39
Q

Protective

A

Competitive exclusion of non-resident bacteria
and pathogens

40
Q

Mucin glycans are what
for some bacteria?

A

Nutrients

41
Q

What is the Niche Occupation?

A

Excluding potential
pathogens

42
Q

How does the Niche Occupation reduce the pH

A

By production of
SCFAs acetate and lactate

43
Q

Where do the cells of the immune system come from?

A

Bone Marrow

44
Q

What is the the Bone Marrow?

A

Production of blood cells, Myeloid, Lymphoid

45
Q

Where does Maturation of lymphocytes occur?

A

In Central Lymphoid Organs

46
Q

What are all lymphoid and myeloid cells derived from?

A

Hematopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow

47
Q
A