Cells of the Immune System Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 2 lineages of immune cell?

A

Lymphoid and myeloid

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2
Q

What are the 3 interacting barriers of the immune system?

A
  1. Epithelial & Mucosal surfaces
  2. Innate immune system (general inflammation response)
  3. Adaptive immune response to specific threat
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3
Q

What are the functions of epithelial cells?

A
  • Block entry to microorganisms
  • Produce antimicrobial proteins which kill most pathogens
  • Produce regulatory proteins (cytokines & chemokines) and mucins
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4
Q

What are goblet/paneth cells?

A

Specialised cells found in endo and epithelial mucosal surfaces often exposed to infection
Contain crypts which secrete mucous and antimicrobial proteins

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5
Q

Describe the properties of neutrophils

A
  • Small granulated cells with a lobate nucleus
  • Have cytoplasm neutral staining
  • 50-70% of blood leucocytes and have a short lifespan (5 days)
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6
Q

What is the function of neutrophils?

A
  • Phagocytic, provide key role in inflammatory response

- Granules contain elastase and antimicrobial proteins (for intracellular killing of bacteria)

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7
Q

Describe the properties of eosinophils

A
  • Slightly bigger than neutrophils with acidic staining
  • 1-6% of blood leucocytes
  • In blood for a few hours but in tissues for a few weeks
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8
Q

What is the function of eosinophils?

A
  • Inflammatory response to parasites, allergic reactions and asthma
  • Present antigen to T cells
  • Granules release peroxidase, anti-parasite toxins, collagenase as extracellular effectors
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9
Q

Describe the properties of basophils

A
  • Bilobate nucleus with granular basophilic cytoplasm
  • Rarest of blood leucocyte types
  • Life span of 70 hours
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10
Q

What are the functions of basophils?

A
  • Granules release histamine, heparin, cytokines, serotonin & chondroitin
  • Involved in inflammation & allergic reactions via IgE binding
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11
Q

Describe the properties of monocytes

A
  • Large cells making up 3-8% of blood leucocytes
  • Subsets distinguished by surface receptors
  • Migrate to reservoirs in tissues (e.g spleen) where they mature to other leucocyte types
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12
Q

What are the functions of monocytes?

A
  • Present antigens and produce signalling molecules

- Clear out debris via phagocytosis

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13
Q

What is the function of platelets/thrombocytes?

A
  • Involved in clotting
  • Express MHC I and possess receptors for IgG
  • Release chemotactic factors
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14
Q

What are lymphocytes?

A

Small, round, non-phagocytic cells which are the made enactors of adaptive immunity

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15
Q

What are the 2 types of lymphocytes?

A

T-cells - mature in thymus and kill infected/cancer cells via antibodies (CD40)
B-cells - made in bone marrow and also secrete and synthesise antibodies (CD4 and CD8)

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16
Q

What are the 3 types of T cell? What are their markers?

A

T-helper - release cytokines, recognise antigens and activate T-killer cells and B-cells, CD4+ marker
T cytotoxic - Kill virus infected, cancerous, foreign and damaged cells. Has CD8+ marker
T regulatory - Modulates immunity and maintains self-tolerance, identified by CD4+ and CD25+ markers

17
Q

What are natural killer (NK) cells?

A
  • Small granules containing perforin and granzymes
  • Kill cells without antibodies
  • Produce cytokines
18
Q

What is the role of macrophages?

A
  • Found in tissues and derived from monocytes
  • Large cells consume bacteria, debris and dead cells
  • Also aid in adaptive response via antigen presentation
19
Q

Describe dendritic cells?

A
  • Small stellate cells derived from the bone marrow
  • Sample blood for pathogens (common in tissues with external contact)
  • When activated, interact with B and T cells in the lymph nodes in order to initiate an adaptive immune response
20
Q

What is the function of mast cells?

A
  • Highly granulated cells rich in histamine and heparin
  • Present in connective tissue/mucosa
  • Degranulation occurs upon injury or after binding to IgE or complement
21
Q

Which lineage evolved first?

A

Myeloid (innate)

22
Q

Where is the thymus found?

A

Between the lungs

23
Q

Describe the maturation process of a T-cell

A
  1. T-cell precursors travel from the bone marrow to develop in the thymus, then are ‘selected’
  2. Mature T-cells leave the thymus and travel to the secondary lymphoid tissues (spleen, lymph node, GALT)
24
Q

Describe the structure of the thymus

A
  • Consists of lobules with outer cortex and inner medulla
  • Cortex contains immature T-cells
  • Medulla contains mature T-cells
25
Q

Where are B cells found in the lymph nodes?

A
  • In follicles where they undergo proliferation after activation
    (note: T-cells found in areas around follicles)
26
Q

What is the structure and function of the spleen?

A
  • White pulp contains lymphocytes
  • Red pulp contains blood sinuses & macrophages
  • Role is to collect and destroy old red blood cells, filtering the blood and traping microorganisms