Immune 9 - WRAP UP Flashcards

1
Q

What happens if bacteria make it past our first defences - LOOK AVER THIS SLIDE OF LECTURE

A
  • Inflation makes capillaries leaky - neutrophils squeeze out of the leaky capillaries and enter tissue
  • Neutrophils are attracted to the site of infection by chemicals released by damaged/infected cells, or associated leukocytes (especially macrophages)
  • bacteria are phagocytoses. Lysosomal enzymes in the phagolysosome kill the bacteria
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2
Q

Immunity to pathogens is usually a combination of cell mediated immunity and antibody production

A
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3
Q

Viral antigens

A
  • viral proteins can enter both the phagolysosome and cytosol of DC
  • phagolysomal antigen will be loaded onto MHC-11 for CD4 (helper) T cell stimulation
  • cytosolic antigen will be loaded onto MHC-1 for CD8 cell stimulation
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4
Q

How to get rid of virus by killing the cell that they are living in

A

CD8 T cell has become activated and is now cytotoxic - it has granules present which coven be released when trigggered
- CD8 cell will only release cytotoxic granules (granzyme / perforin) if its triggered appropriately
- the trigger is the recognition of virus peptides on the MHC-1
- CTL has a T cell receptor that mecognises the peptide MHC-1 complex
- the granules that are released contain granzyme and perforin (cell killing enzymes) - this leads to an ordered destruction of the cell that contains the virus - Neurophille or macrophage or dendritic cell can then eat it up

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5
Q

Colonial selection

A

Selective expansion of lymphocytes that interact with antigen

  • only for T cells specific for the peptide
  • T cell is activated and undergoes extensive cell division - producing effector cells as well as formation of memory cells
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6
Q

Bacteria in Dendritic cell

A
  • bacterial proteins enter the phagolysosome of DC
  • phagosomal antigen will be loaded onto MHC-22 for CD4 (helper) T cell stimulation
  • helper T cells stimulate B cells to make antibody
  • only B cells that recognise anitgen are activated -then turn into plasma cells secreting antibodies
    (Forming memory cells among the way)

Antibodyclass switching: the class or isotope alters the function of the antibody - not the specify (IgM —> IgG —-> IgA —> IgE)

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7
Q

Colonial expansion for B cells

A
  • selective expansion of lymphocytes that interact with anitgen
  • antigen recognised by B cell is called native antigen - not processed to peptides - provides some of the signal that the b cells require to undergo differentiation into plasma cells and memory cells - also requires cytokines
  • only B cells that are specific for the native antigen tho!
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8
Q

MHC-1 LOADING

A

What a BD8 cell will be looking at

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9
Q

MCH-11 loading

A
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10
Q

Antibodies binding to defined regions (antibody binding sites) on a alrger structure

A
  • antibodies bind native antigens
  • severeal different antibodies may target a single type of microbe
  • term native antigen means that the antigen doesn’t not have to be processed down to a peptide of loaded onto MHC
  • antibodies can recognise just any structure
  • antibodies bind tightly to discrete parts on the anigen
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11
Q

Isotopes during the immune response - B cells can genetically switch the heavy chain to change c;ass (isotope) - this doesn’t change the antibody - spefifify but does change the function of the antibody

A
  • constrain region of heavy chain alters properties
  • IgM is good at start of immune response as it is good at activating complement
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12
Q

Primary vs secondary immune responses - formation of antibody classes and lymphocyte differentiation state

A
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13
Q

Vaccines save lives example

A
  • administered to mimic an infection without exposing you to danger - can still use live material (crippled / mutated / cultured tho) - wont cause disease but will cause immunity

Live attenuated: mumps, measles, rubella, polio-Sabin
Killed: polio-Salk, some SARS-CoV2 and some influenza vaccines
Sub-unit protein: tetanus, SARS-Cov2 (maybe just the spike protein)
Sub-unit mRNA: SARVS-CoV2 (e.g Pfizer or Moderna vaccine)

  • body have to do the work of producing the protein - spike
    MRNA is in lipid coat
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14
Q

Adjuvants - usually requires for sub-unit vaccines

A
  • Adjucents are immune stimulants - non specific - added to vaccines that enhance the activation of anitgen presenting cells
  • for example: the mRNA SARS-2 vaccine is intrinsically adjuvanted: the lipid- encapsulated mRNA is immunostimulartory
  • RNA can stimulate Toll-like receptors (add o activation of APC
  • sometimes adjuvant is intrinsic (already there) sometimes it is added
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