Lecture 32 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 layers of immune defense?

A

Physical and chemical, innate and adaptive.

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2
Q

What attracts more cells to the site of injury?

A

Chemical signals from tissue-resident cells acts to attract more cells to the site of injury or infection

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3
Q

Where does neutrophils enter the blood from?

A

Bone marrow

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4
Q

Do neutrophil cling to the capillary wall?

A

Yes

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5
Q

What causes blood vessels to dilate and make capillaries to become leakier?

A

Chemical signals from tissue-resident cells dilate blood vessels and make capillaries leakier

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6
Q

What happens in an inflammatory response when there is a cut in the skin?

A
  • Chemical signals from tissue-resident cells act to attract more cells to the site of injury
  • Neutrophils enter blood from the bone marrow
  • Neutrophils cling to the capillary wall
  • Chemical signals from tissue-resident cells dilate blood vessels and make capillaries ‘leakier’
  • Neutrophils squeeze through the leaky capillary wall and follow the chemical trait to the injury site
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7
Q

What is phagocytosis?

A

A process by which blood could ingest and destroy microbes

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8
Q

What is the stages of phagocytosis?

A
  1. Phagocyte adheres to pathogens or debris
  2. Phagocyte forms pseudopods that eventually engulf the particles, forming a phagolysosome
  3. Lysosomes fuses with the phagotic vesiscle forming a phagolysosome
  4. Toxic compounds and lysosomal enzymes destroy pathogens
  5. Sometimes exocytosis of vesicle removes indigestible and residual material.
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9
Q

How do phagocytes kill microbes? What do they use?

A
  • Low pH- Acid environment
  • Reactive oxygen (hydrogen peroxide) and reactive nitrogen intermediates (nitric oxide)
  • Enzymes such as proteases, lipases and nucleases
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10
Q

What is a complement made out of and what does a complement do?

A

9 major proteins/ protein complexes act in sequence to clear pathogens from blood and tissues

  • Label pathogens (opsonisation)
  • Recruit phagocytes (chemotaxis)
  • Destroy pathogens (lysis)
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11
Q

What are the 3 complement pathways and describe them

A

Classical- Antibody bound to pathogen binds complement
Alternative- Pathogen binds complement to surface/ pathogen component
Lectin - Carbohydrate components of microbes bind complement

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12
Q

What happens when complement pathways converge?

A

Amplification - C3 Convertase (enzyme complex)

Outcomes- Label, destroy and recruit

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13
Q

What is label in the complement cascade?

A

Opsonisation ( Labels pathogens which bind to complement receptors on phagocytes)/ coating of a microbe with antibody and/or complement fragment C3b

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14
Q

What is destroy in the complement cascade?

A

Membrane attack complex formation: pores in bacterial cells –> death C9/ Microbes coated with C3b are phagocytosed, assembly of MAC complex causes lysis

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15
Q

What is recruit in the complement cascade?

A

Complement proteins act as peptide mediators of inflammation and recruit phagocytes/ phagocytes are attracted into site, mast cells degranulated by C3a and C5a, inflammatory mediators released including proteins that attract phagocytes

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