Exam 9: Chapter 11 Flashcards

1
Q

What role do effector memory T cells hold?

A

They specialize in homing to inflamed tissues and functioning within them

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2
Q

Why are memory T cells harder to trace than memory B cells?

A

The TCR does not undergo somatic hypermutation or class switch recombination

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3
Q

When can the prevention of naïve B cell response be problematic?

A

When dealing with a pathogen that can mutate frequently

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4
Q

Why can the prevention of naïve B cell response be problematic?

A

It leads to the gradual weakening of the response to a pathogen and an increase in the severity of disease (original antigenic sin)

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5
Q

What are advantages of memory T cells?

A

Activated faster than naïve T cells, co-stimulation not required for memory T cell activation

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6
Q

What happens to the antibodies that are produces by plasma cells after infection?

A

They eventually degrade and disappear from the serum

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7
Q

How long do plasma cells make antibodies after infection?

A

A few months

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8
Q

What role do central memory T cells hold?

A

They make CD40L, and home to T cell areas of secondary lymphoid organs to interact with B cells

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9
Q

What do conjugate vaccines take advantage of?

A

The need for conjugate pairs between B and T cells

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10
Q

What allows memory T cells to survive for long periods of time?

A

IL-7 and IL-15 produced by activated naïve T cells make enough extra cytokine to maintain memory T cells

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11
Q

Why does the prevention of a naïve B cell response by circulating antibody make sense?

A

It allows for immune response resources to be conserved when responding to an invariant pathogen

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12
Q

What are vaccines designed to do?

A

Stimulate the production of memory cells

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13
Q

What cells do effector memory T cells differentiate into?

A

CD8+, TH1, TH17, or TH2 cells

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14
Q

How does a virus become attenuated?

A

A virus present in humans is grown in cells of other organisms and allowed to mutate; when transferred back to humans, the virus can no longer grow well in human cells and cause disease

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15
Q

What are the three purposes of a successful primary immune response?

A

Clear the infection, provide protection against immediate reinfection, provide long term immunological memory

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16
Q

What happens when a naïve B cell binds pathogen coated with specific antibody?

A

A negative signal is given to the naïve B cell to prevent its activation

17
Q

Why are memory cells more effective in fighting infections?

A
  1. Memory cells are more sensitive and more easily activated
  2. Memory cells that recognize a particular antigen are more abundant than naïve cells that recognize the same antigen
  3. Memory B cells have undergone class switch, somatic hypermutation, and affinity maturation
  4. Activated memory B cells continue to undergo somatic hypermutation and affinity maturation
18
Q

What happens when a memory B cell binds pathogen coated with specific antibody?

A

Memory B cell is activated and becomes an antibody-producing plasma cell

19
Q

What would happen if an Rh- mother were not treated with anti-Rh IgG while carrying her first Rh+ fetus?

A

The secondary immune response would lead to massive destruction of fetal erythrocytes, causing life-threatening anemia in the second (and all subsequent) baby

20
Q

What are the advantages that memory B cells have over naïve B cells?

A

High affinity BCR, lower activation threshold, quicker response, more efficient antigen processing, higher levels of MHC class II, differentiate faster

21
Q

What consequence stems from the property that numbers of memory T cells are held constant?

A

When new memory T cells develop during the response to infection, older memory CD8+ cells must be lost to keep the population constant

22
Q

What prevent s re-infection immediately after an infection is cleared?

A

Combined action of post-infection antibodies and the innate immune response

23
Q

What are the two kinds of memory T cells?

A

Effector memory T cells and central memory T cells