9.28.2022. + 9.30. 2022. Study Questions Flashcards
Describe the functions of lysozyme
degrades peptidoglycan in bacterial cell walls
Describe the function of transferrin
iron-binding protein
Describe the function of gastric acid
protects the body against pathogens that are ingested with food or water
Compare skin and mucus membrane as first line defenses
SKIN:
- tough
- microbes flake off as skin cells do
- water-proof
MUCOUS MEMBRANE:
- bathed with secretions that wash microbes from the surface
- constant turnover of cells –> take microbes with them
- lined with ciliated cells
Which components of the innate immune system can first detect a microbial invasion?
physical barriers (skin, mucous membrane)
normal flora of the body
antimicrobial substances (lysozyme, transferrin, lactoferrin, gastric acid)
Describe how surface receptors and cytokines allow the cells of the immune system to communicate
Surface receptors: eyes and ears of a cell. span the cell membrane, connecting the outside of the cell with the inside of the cell, allowing the cell to sense and respond to external signals.
Cytokines: voices of a cell. a cytokine produced by one cell diffuses to another and binds to the appropriate cytokine receptor of that cell, the binding induces a change in the cell such as growth, differentiation, movement, or cell death.
List three bacterial components recognized by toll-like receptors
LPS, lipoprotein, flagellin
Describe three outcomes of complement activation
- inflammatory response
- opsonization
- lysis of foreign cells
Describe the alternative pathway of complement activation
triggered when C3b binds to foreign cell surfaces, which allows other complement proteins to then attach, eventually forming the C3 convertase. used if you’ve never seen the pathogen before.
What are the functions of C3b?
opsonin. binds to, coats, and marks a cell to be phagocytosed, aka marks it for eating. OR combines with C3 convertase to form an enzyme that splits C5.
What are the functions of C5a? (2)
- chemoattractant, drawing phagocytes to the area where the complement system has been activated
- C3a + C5a = inflammatory response + contribute to local vascular permeability
who’s awesome?
i’m awesome!
What is an NLR?
what does it stand for, what does it lead to, what is it?
NOD-like receptor. inflammatory response. PRRs within cells
What is an RLR?
what does it lead to?
what is its job?
RIG-like receptor. leads to interferon response. PRR within cells, distinguish viral RNA from normal cellular RNA.
Compare and contrast TLRs, NLRs, and RLRs. where are they found?
NLRs and RLRs: floating around, they are receptors in the cytoplasm
TLR: found on the surface or inside phagosomal membrane. they are membrane bound.