Organisation Of The Immune System Flashcards

1
Q

What are some other names for the innate and adaptive immune systems?

A

Innate: Natural or Non specific

Adaptive: acquired or specific

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2
Q

Name the six non-cellular innate defences

A

Skin

Saliva (Antibacterial enzymes)

Tears (Antibacterial enzymes)

Mucus lining

Stomach acid

Good gut bacteria

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3
Q

Name the 3 granular cell types (granulocytes) of the innate immune system and their function?

A

Neutrophil (90% of Granulocytes) - phagocytosis

Eosinophils (2-5%) - destroys parasites

Basophils (0-2%) - inflammation

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4
Q

what is an antigen?

A

A foreign substance that causes a reaction from the immune system. E.g influenza

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5
Q

What is a Pathogen?

A

A microscopic organism that causes sickness

E.G bacteria and viruses

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6
Q

What is Bacteria and it structure?

what is bacteria with an outer membrane called?

A

Single cell, no nucleus

Can cause infections, but many species are non-infectious

come in variety of shapes (e.g rod like, spheres or spirals) and sizes.

gram negative bacteria has outer membrane

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7
Q

What are virus? and how do they function?

A

Cannot express its genes without taking over a host cell

uses host to make copies of itself

Can mutate during cell division, making it harder to detect them

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8
Q

What are the functions of the immune system

A

Protect
recognise
attack
destroy

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9
Q

What characterises neutrophils? and what is the difference between mature and immature neurtrophils?

A

Many shaped nuclei
60% of leukocytes
life-span 2-3 days
3 day reserve in the bone marrow

mature neutrophil have more lobes. Immature have a ‘band shaped nucleus’

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10
Q

Name the 4 processes of neutrophil function?

A

1) Attracted to site of infection by chemotaxins released by infected cell
2) Ingest infected tissue via phagocytosis, helped by opsonins
3) Destroy by release of free radicals and cytoxic enzymes
4) Exhibit refractory period post-stimulation

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11
Q

What is the difference between monocytes and macrophages?

A

Monocytes are found in blood

macrophage in the tissues

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12
Q

What do Monocytes and Macrophages do?

A

Phagocytosis
release cytokines
present antigens

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13
Q

What are ‘classical’ monocytes and their main function?

A
CD14++/CD16- 
anti microbial (killing cells)
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14
Q

What are ‘non-classical’ monocytes and their main function?

A

CD14+/CD16++

highly pro-inflammatory

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15
Q

What Cells do dendritic cells derive from? and what is their main function?

A

Derived from monocytes

their main role is to present antigens to initiate the acquired immune response

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16
Q

What two things does ‘Complement’ do?

A

1) Help to amplify phagocytic response
2) Also do things directly, by forming a shape ring, binding to cell surface; piercing the cell surface causing a lesion. The cell insides leak out causing cell death.

17
Q

What are natural Killer cells? and how do they kill infected cells?

A

Large Granular Lymphocyte
Extracellular killing cell (bind to the outside of cell)

kill cells via perforin (release pins pierce the outside of target cell)
activates apoptosis (cell suicide)
18
Q

Why are NK cells labelled CD3-? and what is the difference between CD56 bright and CD56 dim?

A

CD3- is used to distinguish them from Tcells that contain CD3+.

CD56 dim NK cells are better at cytotoxic activity because they release more perforin. CD56 bright are better at proliferation

19
Q

How is the correct acquired immunity response triggered?

A

Antigen presentation called the major histocompatibility complex

20
Q

Name the overall Tcell CD badge?

A

CD3+

21
Q

Name the Helper Tcell CD badge?

A

CD4+

22
Q

Name the cytotoxic Tcell CD badge?

A

CD8+

23
Q

What do Thelper cells do?

A

Bind to MHC class II, then control and modulate the immune response. Activate cytotoxic tcells. They also form memory of antigens.

24
Q

How are cytotoxic Tcells activated? and what do they do?

A

Activated by Thelper cells or bind to MHC class I.

Function= destroy infected cells via perforin

they also form memory

25
Q

What cytokines do th1 cells release? and what do these do?

A

They release IFN-gamma, IL-2, IL-12

Their function is defence against intracellular pathogens

26
Q

What cytokines do th2 cells release? and what do these do?

A

IL-4, IL-5 and IL-13

Their function is defence against extracellular pathogens

27
Q

Tcell activation requires 2 signals. The antigen presenting cell generates the first signal via MCH. But what must be present for the second signal?

A

The APC must express CD80-86 and the Tcell must bind with CD28 for the second signal

28
Q

Why do you become more susceptible to viral infection with age?

A

Loss of CD28 on T helper cells, not allowing T cell activation

29
Q

What are the CD badge for Treg cells? and what is their function

A

CD25

Mediate immune homeostasis. Tregs suppress activation, proliferation and cytokine production of CD4+ Tcells and CD8+ Tcells

30
Q

What is the CD badge for BCells?

A

CD19 or 20

31
Q

What is the main repsonsibility of Bcells?

A

Production of antigen-specific immunogloblins or antibodies