Overview of I&I Flashcards

1
Q

Who is more vulnerable to infectious disease?

A

Elderly and children (usually)

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2
Q

Major groups of pathogenic bacteria

A

Pyogenic (puss forming)
Enteric
Exotoxin producers
Facultative intracellular parasites (e.g. Shigella) - capable of living and reproducing either inside or outside of cells

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3
Q

Examples of eukaryotic parasites

A

Malaria, leishmaniasis, sleeping sickness

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4
Q

Describe viruses

A

Obligate intracellular parasites which can cause disease by inducing
inflammation, causing cell death, increasing the likelihood that a tumour
will develop.

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5
Q

What may fungi cause?

A

thrush, athletes’ foot, ringworm.

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6
Q

Describe the microbiota?

A
  • Non-pathogenic micro-organisms (usually harmless organisms, with a role in protection from
    pathogens)
  • May cause disease in immunosuppressed individuals (eg. AIDS sufferers, patients immunosuppressed
    with drugs after transplantation or people with inherited immunodeficiencies)
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7
Q

Innate mechanisms of defence against infectious disease

A
  • Can act without help from the specific immune response
  • Includes physical barriers to infection: mucus, gastric acid, bile salts, normal flora

Effector functions:

  • Respiratory burst → neutrophils, monocytes, macrophages
  • Degranulation → mast cell, eosinophils, basophils
  • Phagocytosis and phagolysosomal degradation → neutrophils, macrophages
  • Opsonin-associated functions → neutrophils and macrophages
  • NK cells
  • Soluble molecules → complement, interferons and other secreted molecules
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8
Q

Example of innate immune evasion strategies

A

Avoidance of phagocytosis by capsules (e.g. Streptococcus)

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9
Q

Describe induction of adaptive immune response

A
  • Depends on T and B lymphocytes
  • Involves recognition of an antigen – response is specific for an individual antigen; clonotypic
    distribution of antigen receptors
  • The specific response arises by the selection, clonal expansion, and differentiation of lymphocytes that
    recognise the antigen
  • Immunological memory for a specific antigen involves:
     The primary response to an antigen
     The secondary response (faster and more effective) to the same antigen
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10
Q

What do T cell recognise?

A

Peptide antigens presented by MHC molecules

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11
Q

What do B cells recognise?

A

A wide variety of native antigens

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12
Q

Describe effector mechanisms of adaptive immunity

A

B cells
- B cells differentiate to antibody-secreting cells (plasma cells)
- Antibodies:
 Prevent entry of pathogens (eg. viruses and mucosal bacteria)
 Neutralise bacterial toxins
 Opsonise bacteria
 Initiate acute inflammation via complement cascade (‘classical pathway’)
T cells
- T cells:
 Help B-cells grow and differentiate to plasma cells
 Kill cells directly (eg. virus-infected cells)
 Secrete cytokines which, for example, activate macrophages and NK cells (so improving the
effectiveness of innate immunity)

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