12.5 Non-specific Animal Defences Against Pathogens Flashcards

1
Q

What are primary defences?

A

Barriers that prevent pathogens from entering the body

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2
Q

Examples of primary defences:

A
  • skin
  • naturally living flora on the skin that outcompetes pathogens
  • conjunctiva (membrane covering the eye)
  • lysozymes in tears
  • mucus in airways
  • ciliated epithelial cells in airways
  • mucus and acidic conditions in stomach and vagina
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3
Q

How are primary defences repaired when damaged?

A

Blood clotting and wound repair

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4
Q

What is the process of blood clotting?

A
  1. Damaged tissue
  2. Platelets activates by damaged tissue
  3. Thromboplastin is released
  4. Thromboplastin catalyses the reaction between Ca2+ ions and prothrombin to produce thrombin
  5. Thrombin then catalyses the conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin
  6. Fibrin forms a clot
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5
Q

What are secondary defences?

A

Pathogens can evade primary defences and infect an animal

Infections trigger internal non-specific responses: inflammation, fevers and phagocytosis

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6
Q

What happens in wound repair?

A

Serotonin is released which makes the smooth muscle in the walls of blood vessels contract, so they narrow and reduce the supply of blood to the damaged area

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7
Q

What is the process of inflammation?

A
  • Mast cells (which are leucocytes) release histamines
  • Histamines dilates blood vessels
  • The dilation of blood vessels cause more plasma to move into tissue fluid
  • This raises temperature and causes swelling and pain
  • Cytokines attract phagocytes to the site
  • The pathogens are removed via phagocytosis
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8
Q

How does inflammation help?

A

It reduces the rate of pathogen reproduction

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9
Q

What is the process of phagocytosis?

A
  1. The pathogen releases chemicals that attract phagocyte
  2. Phagocytes recognise the non-human proteins on the pathogen. This is not a response to a specific pathogen, but simply a cell or organism that is non-self
  3. The phagocyte engulfs the pathogen and the pathogen is enclosed in a vacuole (called a phagosome)
  4. Lysosome fuses with phagosome (forming a phagolysosome)
  5. Enzymes released by the lysosomes digest and destroy the pathogen
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10
Q

How does phagocytosis help?

A

It destroys pathogenic cells

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11
Q

What is the process of a fever

A
  1. Normal body temperature is around 37°C and is maintained by the hypothalamus
  2. When pathogens enter the body, cytokines stimulate the hypothalamus to reset the body’s thermostat and the temperature goes up
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12
Q

What are expulsive reflexes?

A

Ways in which the body expels pathogens
E.g.
- coughs and sneezes eject pathogen-laden mucus from the gas exchange system
- vomiting and diarrhoea expel the content of the gut along with any infective pathogens

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13
Q

What is the role of collagen in wound repair?

A

It strengthens the new cells that form

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