innate immunity Flashcards

1
Q

physical and physiological barriers of the innate immune system

A
  • intact skin and mucous membranes
  • ciliated cells in the respiratory tract (ciliary elevator)
  • hydrolytic enzymes in secretions (like saliva)
  • low pH (skin, stomach, vagina)
  • fluid flow (in bladder and heart)
  • defensins (GI and respiratory tracts)
  • normal flora occupies receptors and prevents pathogen colonizations
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2
Q

WBCs of innate immunity

A
  • neutrophils
  • monocytes and MΦ
  • basophils and mast cells
  • NK cells
  • eosinophils
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3
Q
neutrophil function
(aka granulocytes, PMNs, bands)
A
  • mobilize quickly from the bone marrow to blood/tissue
  • phagocytose and kill micro-organisms
  • release cytokines
  • do not present antigen on MHC class II
  • major cell of acute inflammatory response
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4
Q

monocyte and macrophage function

A
  • monocytes in blood; macrophages in tissues
  • recognize patterns on pathogens and release cytokines
  • phagocytose
  • APCs (MHC class II)
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5
Q

basophil and mast cell function

A
  • basophils in blood; mast cells in tissues
  • express TLRs that recognize bacteria and virus patterns
  • activated by tissue damage, C3a and C5a complement, and IgE binding
  • rapidly release mediators of inflammation (histamine)
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6
Q

NK cell function

A
  • recognize absence of MHC class I (tumor cells and infected cells lack MHC class I)
  • contain and secrete cytotoxic granules to directly kill infected cells
  • don’t express antigen specific receptors
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7
Q

complement function

A
  • plasma proteins that augment (complement) inflammation)
  • directly lyse cells
  • opsonization
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8
Q

why must complement be activated and what are the 3 pathways for activation?

A
  • complement circulates as inactive precursors => must generate C3 convertase to cleave C3 into active subparts
  • pathways: classic, alternate, lectin
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9
Q

classic pathway

A

C1 binds constant fragment of antigen bound IgG or IgM

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10
Q

alternative pathway

A

microbial products directly activate complement

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11
Q

lectin pathway

A

mannose-binding lectin binds carbohydrate antigens on the surface of micro-organisms (such as encapsulated bugs)

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12
Q

what complement proteins are made after activation of C3 convertase?

A
  1. C3 => C3a and C3b
  2. C3b => C5
  3. C5 => C5b and C5a
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13
Q

how do bacterial capsules help bugs evade immunity?

A

prevent complement activation and decrease C3b (opsonin) binding

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14
Q

defensins

A
  • highly cationic peptides
  • create pores in bacterial membranes
  • GI tract = alpha; respiratory tract = beta
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15
Q

interferons (alpha and beta)

A
  • antiviral proteins
  • bind to cell and induce anti-viral state (inhibit replication)
  • produced by lymphocytes and mΦ
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16
Q

how is pattern recognition involved in innate immunity?

A
  • cells of innate immunity have pattern recognition receptors
  • receptors recognize pathogen-associated molecular patterns (present on microbes but not human cells)
17
Q

what PRRs are involved in extracellular pathogen recognition?

A

TLRs:

  • on cell surface of mΦ’s, mast cells, dendritic cells, B cells
  • TLR4 (and CD14 co-receptor) binds LPS

Mannose receptors:

  • on cell surface of mΦ’s and dendritic cells
  • recognize mannose on bacterial/yeast cell surfaces
18
Q

what PRRs are involved in intracellular pathogen recognition?

A

NOD receptors:
- recognize peptidoglycan (intracellular bacteria)

RIG-I helicase receptors
- recognize viral nucleic acids

19
Q

what is the downstream effect of pattern recognition?

A

stimulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines and the acute phase response

20
Q

what are the pro-inflammatory cytokines secreted by monocytes/macrophages and neutrophils?

A

IL-1, IL-6, IL-8, TNFa

21
Q

what are the consequences of the acute phase response?

A

increased synthesis of proteins produced in the liver that may also contribute to sepsis:

  • C-reactive protein
  • mannose binding lectin
  • factor XII (kallikrein-bradykinin pathway)
22
Q

what are the anti-inflammatory cytokines produced by monocytes/macrophages and neutrophils

A

IL-10, TGFB

23
Q

how is the innate immune system linked to the adaptive immune system?

A

APC’s phagocytose and inhibit/kill organisms => present peptides on MHC class II and migrate to the secondary lymphoid organs to interact with cells of the adaptive immune system