Monocytosis & Monocytopenia Flashcards

1
Q

Monocytosis –>

A

increased number of monocytes in the blood

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2
Q

monocytosis occurs in response to

A

chronic infections, autoimmune disorders, proliferation of macrophages can occur in tissues

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3
Q

sarcoidosis

A

proliferation of macrophages in tissues

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4
Q

Monocytopenia –>

A

low number of monocytes in the blood.

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5
Q

monoctypenia occurs in response to…

A

chemotherapy and endotoxemia

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6
Q

Origin and maturation of Mononuclear Phagocytes

fetus

A

HSC in fetus/yolk sac —> embryonic tissue mac precursor –> through blood –> differentiation into tissue kinds

(sinosoidal cells, kupfer cells, microglial cells, alveolar cells)

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7
Q

Origin and maturation of Mononuclear Phagocytes

adult

A

HSC in bone marrow –> monocyte/dendritic cell precursor –> monoblast –> monocyte –> macrophage

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8
Q

Macrophages: where are they found? how common? what do they do exactly?

A

not in circulation, but in tissues
ubiquitous
phagocytosis + APC

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9
Q

Macrophage expresses ___________ receptors

A

PRR and scavanger receptors

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10
Q

What kind of molecular signals do macrophages detect?

A

danger signals in the form of pathogens, foreign substances (silica/asbestos etc), dead dying cells

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11
Q

in what systems are MOs active?

A

both innate and adaptive

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12
Q

MO PRRs stimulate the production of cytokines ___ and ___

A

TNF and IL-1beta

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13
Q

MO roles

A

would repair
cytokines/chemokines (leukocyte recruitment)
deposition of extracellular matrix components at sites of injury

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14
Q

what are MO cytokines that push for the development of TH1 cells?

A

IL-12, TNF, IL-23

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15
Q

“feedback loop” with T cells

A

IL-12, TNF, IL-23 amplifies Th1 cells to produce IFN-gamma

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16
Q

MO cytokines suspected to be the main drivers behind chronic inflammatory autoimmune disease (name these diseases too)

A

IL-1beta and TNF

rheumatoid arthritis, atherosclerosis, pulmonary fibrosis, Crohn’s disease

17
Q

Phagocytosis requires 3 things

A

1) energy from metabolism
2) additional cell membrane
3) cytoplasmic contractile protein system

18
Q

what is the “scavenger function”

A

“ingest” and “destroy” microbes and damaged tissues

19
Q

steps in phagocytosis

A

1) recruitment
2) recognition
3) ingestion via phagocytosis
4) digestion (destruction)

20
Q

diapedesis vs chemotaxis

A

diapedesis: cellular emigration of phagocytes out of blood circulation into tissues
chemotaxis: when a phagocyte moves toward other cells/organisms by cytoplasmic streaming in response to chemotaxins.

21
Q

chemotaxins

A

C5a in response LPS
N-formylmethionine (on bacterial cells, not eukaryotic cells)….phagocytes have a receptor for the N-terminus amino acids, which causes them to chase them