3 - innate immunity Flashcards

1
Q

examples of potentially pathogenic microorganisms

A

viruses
fungi
parasites
bacteria

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2
Q

1st defensive barrier of body

A

skin

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3
Q

breaking of skin - cuts

A

exposes body tissues to bacteria and fungal infections

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4
Q

main portals of entry to the body

A

mucosal epithelia of …
1 - GI tract
2- respiratory tract
3 - urogenital tract

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5
Q

why does immune system find parasites hard to remove

A

too big

tries to surround and encapsulate them

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6
Q

PAMPs

A

Pathogen associated molecular patterns

recognised by an array of PRRs
conserved or specific

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7
Q

where are innate immune cells found

A

sitting under skin of lung surfaces

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8
Q

features of innate immune cells

A

always there
no prior activation required
encoded in germline
under constant surveillance

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9
Q

where are immune cells derived from

A

pluripotent haematopoietic stem cell

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10
Q

HSC differentiation

A

divides to replace itself and produce a progenitor cell with potential to form all 3 lineages

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11
Q

myeloid lineage

A

produces phagocytic cells and inflammatory cells
innate
protect epithelial surfaces

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12
Q

mast cells role

A

sentinel role

differentiate and sit in tissues waiting to be activated

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13
Q

basophils/eosinophils role

A

circulating cells

recruited from blood stream to infected tissue when signal is received

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14
Q

killing mechanism of baso/eosino/mast cells

A

attack pathogens too large to be internalised

  • degranulate when signal received on outside of cell
  • release toxic contents creating hostile environment or directly kills pathogen
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15
Q

granulocyte granules

A

contain toxic components
e.g. histamines (important for allergies)
proteases

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16
Q

mechnikov 1898

A

discovery of phagocytosis
observational study of sticking thorns into cells
realised that migratory cells surround site of damage in animals with a vascular system

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17
Q

front line effector cells

A

macrophages and neutrophils

18
Q

role of macrophages

A

sentinel
surveillance
send chemical signals to recruit more neutrophils (more effective)
phagocytic cells

19
Q

dendritic cells

A

similar to macrophages
however..
dont fully destroy pathogens

20
Q

action of DCs

A

break up pathogen and present fragments on cell surface to cells of adaptive immunity
ANTIGEN PRESENTATION

21
Q

monocytes

A

type of WBC/leukocyte

differentiate into dendritic cells and macrophages

22
Q

granulocytes

A

leukocytes (neutrophils)
basophils
mast cells
eosinophils

23
Q

natural killer (NK) cells

A

specialised cytotoxic T lymphocyte

innate

24
Q

types of macrophage receptors

A

scavenger receptors
complement receptors
receptors for conserved components of pathogens

25
Q

Fc receptors

A

from Ig superfamily
found on surface of immune cells
recognise antibody (produced by adaptive immunity) binding to outside of pathogen

26
Q

2 methods of innate activation

A

direct

indirect

27
Q

direct activation of innate immunity

A

PAMP recgnised on pathogen by PRR on immune cell

28
Q

indirect activation of innate immunity

A

if rececptors cannot grasp pathogen e.g. pathogen has slime capsule
delay
adaptive immunity activated
antibodies produced which opsonise pathogen
recognised by Fc receptor - phagocytosed

29
Q

define opsonin

A

soluble component of immune system

coats microorganisms and stimulates their uptake by phagocytosis

30
Q

‘ruffling’

A

motile cells migrate to cell membrane
actin polymerisation takes place
recognised by Fc receptors
dragged into phagosome

31
Q

phagocytic cell roles

A

1 - release cytokines and chemokines

2 - activate adaptive immune response

32
Q

chemokine

A

chemotactic cytokine

lays trails for migration of cells to site of infection

33
Q

example of chemokine

A

e.g. IL-8/CXCL-8

34
Q

cytokines

A

signalling molecules
increase permeability of blood vessels
allows cells to move out towards site of infection
inflammatory response can occur

35
Q

cytokine receptors

A

JAK/STAT
STAT molecules are phosphorylised and dimerise
STAT dimer translocates to nucleus and initiates transcription

36
Q

transendothelial migration

A

neutrophil rolls along epithelium of blood vessel
squeezes through loosened tight junction into adjacent connective tissue
migrates along concentration gradient of chemokine towards site of infection

37
Q

why are selectins important

A

interactions with selectins are low affinity

constantly made and broken allowing rolling along surface of epithelium of blood vessel

38
Q

what do fluid matrices e.g. tears contain

and why are they important in immunity

A

antibacterial peptides
toxic proteins

upregulated when pathogen component recognised
important for recruiting neutrophils to inflammatory sites

39
Q

examples of antibacterial peptides and where are they found

A

B-defensins - lungs/skin
a- defensins - paneth cells of intestinal tract
lysozyme - fluid bathing cornea (potent)
cathelicidins

40
Q

cathelicidins

A

produced by activated neutrophils and epthelial cells
signal thorugh formyl peptide receptors (GPCR)
aids neutrophil recruitment when bound

41
Q

fMLP - formyl-methionyl peptide

A

bacterial peptide (chemotactic)
chemoattractant –> activates neutrophil recruitment
cleaved by peptidase and released into extracellular space
binds to receptor on outside of neutrophils