Chapter 2.1 Acute Inflammation (Part 2) Flashcards
What are the three phases of acute inflammation? When does each phase peak? Describe.
Fluid phase (goal of initial phase is to bring fluid and edema important activating proteins like complement into tissue space)
neutrophil phase (peaks 24 hours)
macrophage phase (peaks at about 2-3 days)
Describe the first step of neutrophil arrival.
particles that were running in center of flow (heavier) will now come to edge of the blood flow = margination
margination is first step of neutrophil arrival.
Where do neutrophils come in?
same place that fluid comes in from… post capillary venules
Describe how vasodilation changes the speed of blood flow. In what vessels does this take place?
How does position of cells change? Why?
slows blood flow in postcapillary venules
cells marginate from center of flow to periphery
Describe the mechanism of the second step in neutrophil arrival “rolling”.
Cells that have marginated to periphery have to slow down - hit these “selectin speed bumps” which are upregulated on endothelial cells (which line the blood vessels)
endothelial cells begin to express selectins which will cause neutrophils to slow down along blood vessel periphery = “rolling” (roll slowly along selectin speed bumps)
Selectin “speed bumps” are upregulated on endothelial cells during neutrophil activation.
What are the two subtypes of selectins and where do they come from?
P-selectin is released from Weibel-Palade bodies; mediated by histamine
E-selectin is induced by TNF and IL1
Where does P-selectin come from? What mediates its release?
Weibel-Palade bodies (has proteins necessary for survival of endothelial cells…
W- Von Willibrand factor
P- P selectin
mediated by histamine
What two things induce E-selectin?
TNF and IL-1
What do selectins bind? What does this interaction result in?
Bind sialyl Lewis X on leukocytes (this allows for rolling of neutrophils)
interaction results in rolling of leukocytes along the vessel wall
(leukocytes =WBC, neutrophils and macrophages use this mechanism)
Define “adhesion” and describe what factors upregulate adhesion molecules.
binding of leukocyte to vessel wall
cellular adhesion molecules (I CAM and V CAM) are upregulated on endothelium by TNF and IL-1
What will upregulate integrins on leukocytes?
C5a and LTB4 (same molecules that draw in the neutrophils)
interaction results in firm adhesion to vessel wall
(integrins on neutrophils bind cellular adhesion molecules on endothelial cells which will allow the neutrophil to come across blood vessel into the tissue space
What causes Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiency? How is it inherited?
Describe the mechanism/implication.
autosomal recessive defect of integrins (CD18 subunit)
(integrins are necessary for neutrophil to bind cellular adhesion molecules on endothelium.. no integrin… neutrophils cannot get into tissue)
What might delayed separation of umbilical cord indicate? Describe disease and mechanism.
Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiency
Delayed separation of umbilical cord (when baby born, umbilical cord which had blood flowing through it is sealed when no longer connected to placenta, so undergoes necrosis, then acute inflammation so tissue can be destroyed so it can be healed, when blood supply of umbilical cord is cut off, tissue will tie, and cord will fall off…neutrophils coming in to destroy tissue help it fall off
if neutrophils cannot come in, that separation of umbilical cord from baby skin will be delayed
What do increased circulating neutrophils indicate?
Describe.
Leukocyte Adhesion deficiency
Normally:
neutrophils circulating in the blood (50 percent)
neutrophils hanging out in blood vessels of lung (50 percent) =marginated pool (adhesion necessary)
if adhesion defected marginal pool can’t hang out, those neutrophils will be released into blood so patients have increased circulating neutrophils
What do recurrent bacterial infections that lack pus formation indicate?
Leukocyte Adhesion deficiency