Cells And The Immune Response Flashcards

1
Q

Process of phagocytosis

A

A phagocyte recognises the foreign antigens on a pathogen
The cytoplasm of the phagocyte moves round the pathogen engulfing it
The pathogen is now contained Ina phagocyte vacuole in the cytoplasm of the phagocyte
A lysosomes fuses with the phagocyte vacuole. The lysozyme break down the pathogen
The phagocyte becomes an antigen presenting cell

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2
Q

Activation of T cells

A

T cell binds to receptors on antigen presenting cell which activates production of T cells

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3
Q

What do helper T cells do

A

Release chemical signals that activate and stimulate phagocytes and cytotoxic T cells. Activate B cells

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4
Q

What do cytotoxic T cells do

A

Kill abnormal and foreign cells

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5
Q

What do B cells do

A

B cells are covered in antibodies. Antibody meets complementary antigen it binds to it. B cells divide into plasma cells

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6
Q

Antibody production

A

Plasma cells are identical to B cells. They secrete loads of antibodies specific to the antigen. These are monoclonal antibodies

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7
Q

Agglutination is

A

The clumping of pathogens. Two pathogens bind to one antibody

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8
Q

How does hiv harm the body

A

Kills helper T cells so other cells in the immune system are not activated - no B cells so no antibodies

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9
Q

What is the latency period of hiv

A

Hiv replication drops to a lower level - no symptoms

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10
Q

Symptoms of aids

A
Minor infections of mucous membranes
Recurring respiratory infections
Diarrhoea 
TB
Toxoplasmosis of the brain
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11
Q

Structure of hiv

A
Attachment protein
Envelope
Capsid
RNA
Reverse transcriptase
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12
Q

Hiv replication

A

Attachment protein attaches to receptor molecule on the membrane of the host helper T cell
The capsid is released into the cell where it uncoats and releases the rna into the cells cytoplasm
Reverse transcriptase makes complimentary strand of DNA from the rna
Inserted into DNA of host cell
Host cell enzymes make viral proteins from viral DNA
Viral proteins assembled into new virus

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13
Q

How do antibiotics work

A

Interfere with bacterias metabolic reactions. They target bacterias enzymes and ribosomes

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14
Q

What are antigens

A

Molecules that can generate an immune response when detected by the body

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15
Q

What are pathogens

A

Organisms that cause disease

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16
Q

What is a toxin

A

Form of antigen that are poisonous

17
Q

Cellular response is

A

The T cells and other immune system cells that they interact with

18
Q

Humoral response is

A

B cells, clonal selection and production of monoclonal antibodies

19
Q

Natural active immunity is

A

Become immune after catching disease

20
Q

Artificial active immunity is

A

Become immune after given a vaccine

21
Q

Natural passive immunity is

A

Become immune as gained antibodies from mother through placenta and breast feeding

22
Q

Artificial passive immunity is

A

Become immune after inject with antibodies made by someone else

23
Q

Active immunity evaluation

A

Requires exposure to antibody
Takes a while for protection to develop
Memory cells produced
Protection is long term

24
Q

Passive immunity evaluation

A

Doesn’t require exposure to antigens
Protection is immediate
Memory cells aren’t produced
Protection is short term

25
Q

Ethical issues surrounding vaccines

A

Animal testing
Testing on humans is risky - volunteers can put themselves under unnecessary risk of contracting disease
People don’t take vaccines due to risk but still protected due to heard immunity
No vaccines for new diseases - difficult decisions about who receives vaccine first