Lecture 7 Flashcards

1
Q

What are high endothelial venules?

A

The region in which lymphocytes leave the blood stream

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2
Q

What is the main lymphatic vessel which takes the lymph back to the blood?

A

The thoracic duct

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3
Q

What is the point of the continuous circulation of lymph?

A

To ensure that the correct lymphocyte will encounter antigens and allow circulation of the resulting activated cells

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4
Q

What are the four effector responses of the lymphocytes?

A

Anti body production, Antigen-specific cytotoxicity, Antibody-dependant cell mediated cytotoxicity, Natural Killer cell activity

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5
Q

What are the regulatory responses of lymphocytes?

A

Cytokine production

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6
Q

Do effector responses last forever?

A

No they degrade, but immunological memory will allow a more vigorous rapidly secondary response

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7
Q

What region on the immunoglobulin molecule has a high affinity for neutrophils?

A

The CH3 domain

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8
Q

What connects the heavy and light chains?

A

Disulphide bonds

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9
Q

What is the purpose of the hinge region of the immunoglobulin molecule?

A

To allow the immunoglobulin to change from a Y to a T shape

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10
Q

What is the CH2 region responsible for?

A

Where complement proteins can bind to

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11
Q

What do primary antibody responses result from?

A

When an unactivated antigen sensitive B cells come into contact with its specific antigen

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12
Q

What do secondary antibody responses result from?

A

Activation of long lived memory B lymphocytes

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13
Q

Where does the activation for primary and secondary immune responses occur?

A

Secondary lymphoid organs

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14
Q

What does activation of antigen sensitive B lymphocytes result in?

A

Maturation of B lymphocytes into plasma cells and a few memory cells

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15
Q

What is the function of plasma cells?

A

To secrete the specific antibodies which act against the antigens of the pathogens

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16
Q

Do memory cells last forever?

A

No

17
Q

What causes antigen sensitive B cells to proliferate into plasma and memory cells?

A

When an antigen brought to the secondary lymphoid organ by an antigen presenting cell WITH the addition of helper signals in the formation of hormones and cell surface interaction

18
Q

What are the four methods that antibodies aid in the immune response?

A

Direct neutralisation, Complement activation, oponisation, antibody-dependant cell-mediated cytotoxicity

19
Q

How do antibodies aid in cell cytotoxicity?

A

K lymphocytes recognize the Fc region of antibodies allowing them to recognise and kill pathogens

20
Q

How do K lymphocytes recognise pathogens?

A

Through use of receptors for C3b and Fc regions of immunoglobulins

21
Q

How do K lymphocytes kill cells?

A

Through use of short range cytotoxicity factors NOT phagoctyosis

22
Q

How do complement proteins become activated?

A

Through bacterial cell wall components or through antigen-antibody complexes

23
Q

What are the two pathways in which the antigen-antibody complex and the complement system act?

A

The classical pathway and the alternative pathway

24
Q

What is the classical pathway?

A

When antibodies-antigen complexes activate the complement system

25
Q

What is the alternative pathway?

A

When the complement system is activated by bacterial cell wall components

26
Q

What are the three basic functions of the complement immune system?

A

Chemotaxis, Oponisation and lysis