12 Immunity Flashcards
what is the immune response?
a response to the presence of a foreign antigen involving the activation of lymphocytes and the production of antibodies
what is the definition of the primary defences?
mechanisms that have evolved to prevent the entry of pathogenic organisms
give some examples of barrier defences
skin
- keratinocytes prevent entry of pathogens
- blood clotting prevent entry of pathogens to blood
eye
- conjunctiva protected by lysozyme
airways
stomach
- mucus layer
- HCl to maintain optimum enzyme pH and destroying pathogens in food
vagina
- low pH
give some examples of inflammatory defences
tissue injury –> release of histamine
dilation and leaking of local arterioles
capillaries become more permeable
outline the process of phagocytosis
{phagocytes = neutrophils + macrophages}
pathogens release chemicals/damaged mammalian cells release cytokines
phagocyte moves down chemical concentration gradient towards pathogen via chemotaxis
pathogen is attached to receptors on CSM of phagocyte
phagocyte surrounds and engulfs the pathogen in a phagosome
lysosomes containing hydrolytic enzymes fuse with the phagosome creating a phagolysosome
enzymes break down and digest the pathogen
useful products absorbed; unwanted are exocytosed
antigens presented on CSM to alert T helper cells
where are T cells produced and matured?
produced in bone marrow
matured in thymus gland
where are B cells produced and matured?
produced AND matured in bone marrow
what is maturation of B and T cells?
addition of receptors
what are the four types of T cells?
helper
- detect antigens and secrete cytokines
- stimulates B lymphocytes to produce B plasma and memory cells in clonal selection and expansion
killer
- destroy infected cells by producing a protein that punches a hole in the CSM
regulatory
- supressor - maintain tolerance to self-antigens
- prevent AI diseases
memory
- remain and circulate in blood and tissues
- co-ordinate a response on reinfection
what is the function of B cells? what are the two types?
to search for the antigen that matches their receptors (clonal selection)
stimulated by T helper cells to divide in clonal expansion
plasma
- produce monoclonal antibodies which bind with the antigen to form an antigen-antibody complex, immobilising the antigen
memory
- recognise pathogens and co-ordinate more antibodies for response to secondary infection
what are antibodies?
soluble glycoproteins that bind to complementary antigens on the surface of the pathogen
where do antibodies come from?
B plasma cells
what is neutralisation?
antibodies combine with viruses/bacterial toxins to prevent them entering/damaging cells
what is agglutination?
antibodies immobilise pathogens by clumping them together to stop them entering the cell and making them easier to be phagocytosed
what is immobilisation?
antibodies stop movement of bacteria by attaching to flagella