Innate Immunity Flashcards

1
Q

What are the characteristics of innate immunity?

A

Fast, lack specificity, lack memory, no change in intensity = factors that prevent entry, limit growth, contain and clear infect

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2
Q

What are the characteristics of adaptive immunity?

A

Slow, specific, memory, changes in intensity

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3
Q

What needs to be activated for the adaptive immune response to take place?

A

Innate immunity

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4
Q

What are the 4 types of barriers in innate immunity?

A

1) Physical barriers = skin, mucous mem, cilia.
2) Physiological barriers = vomiting, diarrhoea, coughing, sneezing.
3) Chemical barriers = low pH, antimicrobial molecules (IgA, lysozymes, mucus).
4) Biological barriers = normal flora.

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5
Q

How can normal flora be displaced to a sterile location?

A

Breaking the skin barrier, faecal-oral route, faecal-perineal-urethral route, poor dental hygiene/dental work

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6
Q

Other than displacement how can an infection take place?

A

Immune-compromised host, normal flora depleted by Abx

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7
Q

Innate barriers being the first line of defence in innate immunity, what is the second?

A

Phagocytes, complement, cytokines = inflam

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8
Q

What is the role of a macrophage?

A

Phagocyte, prod chemokines/cytokines, APC

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9
Q

What is the role of a neutrophil?

A

60% of WBCs, increase in infect, recruited by chemokines, phagocytise pyogenic bacteria

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10
Q

What is the role of a basophil?

A

Contain heparin and histamine = inflam, allergic reactions

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11
Q

What is the role of an eosinophil?

A

Parasites

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12
Q

What is the role of a NK cell?

A

Kill abnormal host cells

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13
Q

What enables a phagocyte to recognise a microbe?

A

PAMPs (pathogen associated molecular patterns) on the microbe are recognised by PRRs (pathogen recognition receptors / toll like receptors) on the phagocyte AND/OR opsonisation

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14
Q

Name some opsonins

A

Complement = C3b, Ab = IgG IgM, acute phase proteins = CRP

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15
Q

What is the diff between a phagosome and a phagolysosome?

A

Phagosome = phagocytic vesicle. Phagolysosome = phagocytic vesicle fused with lysosome

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16
Q

Outline a phagocytes intracellular killing mechanism

A

O2 dependent = hydrogen peroxide, hydroxyl radical, nitric oxide, oxygen radical, hypohalite.

O2-independent = lysosome, lactoferrin/transferrin

17
Q

What are the antimicrobial actions of the complement system?

A

1) C3a C5a = recruitment of phagocytes.
2) C3b-C4b = opsonisation.
3) C5-C9 = killing, MAC

18
Q

TNFα/IL-1/IL-6 from macrophages, has what actions?

A

Liver prod CRP, bone marrow cause neutrophil mobilization, vasodilation, increased vascular permeability, hypothalamus increases temp

19
Q

What reasons would cause decreased phagocytosis?

A

Decreased spleen function, decreased neutrophil count, decreased neutrophil function

20
Q

Why does losing the spleen put you at an increased risk of severe infection?

A

When the spleen is no longer present (asplenia), IgG and C3b are still bound to bacteria, but they cannot be removed from the blood circulation due to the loss of the splenic macrophages.