6.3 Flashcards

1
Q

How does skin and mucous membranes protect the body from pathogens?

A

mucous membranes:
- are a thinner and softer type of skin w/sticky mucous
- sticky solution of glycoproteins trap pathogens

Skin:
- continuous
- many thick layers
- dry
- pH is slightly acidic, unfavourable for things to grow

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2
Q

Cells in the bloodstream

A
  • platelets
  • red blood cell
  • lymphocyte
  • phagocyte
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3
Q

Blood clotting

A
  • platelet/cell damage release clotting factors
  • this results in a cascade of rxns
  • thrombin converts fibrinogen (soluble) into fibrin (fibrous and insoluble) (forms a mesh around wound site and captures blood cells and platelets to form a clot)
  • fibron captures erythrocytes
  • results in a clot (blood clotting must be monitored
  • with presence of air, a scab forms, shields healing tissues underneath
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4
Q

Coronary heart disease

A
  • Blood clots sometimes form in coronary arteries (called coronary thrombosis)
  • coronary arteries become clogged (called atherosclerosis: occlusion on coronary artery)
  • thus, heart tissues are not provided with a supply of O2
  • may cause myocardial infarction (heart attack)
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5
Q

Risk factors for coronary heart disease

A

Genetic: high BP
Age: older people have a greater risk/less elasticity in arteries
Sex: males greater at risk
Exercise: lack of exercise increases risk: weakened circulation
Stress: linked to increased cortisol hormones in blood: increase atherosclerosis

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6
Q

First line of defence for pathogens

A

Phagocytic leukocytes (phagocyte)

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7
Q

Process of pathogen ingestion

A
  1. Pathogen approaches WBC
    (Phagocytes can squeeze through pores of capillaries, chemotaxis (movement in response to chemicals) attracts phagocytes to area of invasion)
  2. Antigens recognize pathogen and phagocyte attaches to cell surface of pathogen
  3. Phagocyte engulfs pathogen by endocytosis
  4. Lysosomes approach and attach to the pathogen: phagosome is formed (vesicle containing pathogen) lysosomes deposit enzymes into the phagosome
  5. Enzymes break down pathogen
  6. Waste products released by exocytosis
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8
Q

Antigen definition

A

Molecule found on a cell/virus surface that causes antibody formation

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9
Q

Antibody definition

A

Globular protein that recognizes a specific antigen and binds to it as a part of an immune response

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10
Q

What triggers an immune response?

A
  • by “non-self” cells
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11
Q

Clonal selection (mainly involves lymphocytes)

A
  • many lymphocytes: each type recognizes one specific antigen
  • when immune system challenged by the invasion of a pathogen, corresponding lymphocyte responds
  • lymphocyte clones itself, each of which produce antibodies to the pathogen
  • process is called clonal selection (selection- lymphocyte is selected, clonal- lymphocyte is cloned)
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12
Q

What are the roles of antibodies????

A
  • make a pathogen more recognizable to phagocytes (more easily engulfed)
  • prevent viruses from docking into host cells as they cannot enter the cells
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13
Q

Lifespan of antibodies

A
  • persist only for a few weeks or a few months
  • cloned cells remain as memory cells, ready for a second invasion by the pathogen (called immunity!)
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14
Q

Antibiotics use

A

Used in the prevention/treatment of prokaryotic bacteria

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15
Q

How do antibiotics interfere with prokaryotes?

A
  • destroy cell walls and membranes
  • interfere w/ protein synthesis
  • interfere w/ DNA/RNA synthesis
  • other metabolic processes (such as enzyme function)
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16
Q

What types of cells can antibiotics affect?

A
  • not eukaryotic cells
  • (yes) prokaryotic cells
  • note: viruses are non-living therefore antibiotics cannot be used on viruses
17
Q

Antibiotics discovered in which organism?

A

Saprotrophic fungi

18
Q

Know Penicillin

A

Nothing here

19
Q

Viruses characteristics

A
  • non living (can only reproduce in a host cell)
  • use host cell metabolism, therefore not effected by antibiotics
  • protected by the host cell structure
  • structure very different from prokaryote (protein capsid and genetic material: no cell wall or membrane)
20
Q

What can be used on viruses?? (NOT ANTIBIOTICS!!!!)

A
  • Antivirals. (On some, targeting virus enzymes)
21
Q

Antibiotic resistance (how to avoid??)

A
  • prescribe antibiotics only for serious bacteria infections (e.g. not for food poisoning
  • patients complete courses of antibiotics to eliminate bacteria complete (kill off all bacteria)
  • high standards of hygiene to eliminate cross contamination
  • farmers not using antibiotics on animal feeds to stimulate growth
  • pharmaceutical companies developing new types of antibiotics (no new antibiotics since 1980s)
22
Q

HIV (what is it?)

A
  • HIV gradually attacks the immune system
  • harder to fight off other infections and diseases
  • no cure for HIV
23
Q

AIDS

A
  • Syndrome caused by HIV
  • immune system weak
  • last stage of HIV: body cannot defend itself, can develop diseases and can cause death if left untreated