Immunity to Infections Flashcards

1
Q

what are the three mechanisms of innate immunity to extracellular bacteria

A
  1. complement activation
  2. opsonization and phagocytosis
  3. stimulation of inflammatory reactions via anaphylatoxin
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2
Q

how does humoral immunity deal with extracellular bacteria

A

eliminate microbes and neutralize their toxins via antibodies that recognize:
- cell wall antigens
- secreted and cell-associated toxins

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3
Q

in general, humoral immunity uses which cells and in turn what else

A

B cells, antibody and Igs

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4
Q

what happens with cell-mediated immunity to extracellular bacteria (3)

A

bacterial protein antigens are processed by DC, and activate CD4 helper T cells for:
- production of IL-17 and neutrophil recruitment
- production of IFNy and activation of macrophages
- B cell help

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5
Q

in general, what type of immune response is elicited by extracellular bacteria

A

complement, phagocytes, and Ig

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6
Q

in general, what type of immune response is elicited by intracellular bacteria

A

phagocytes, NK cells, cell mediated

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7
Q

intracellular bacteria elimination requires which immunity

A

cell-mediated

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8
Q

how does the innate immunity help with intracellular bacteria

A
  1. phagocytes and complement before cells become infected
  2. NK cells are activated directly or via IL-12 produced by macrophages
    - (NK cells produce IFNy which activated macrophages)
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9
Q

how does adaptive immunity help with intracellular bacteria

A
  1. CD4 T cells differentiate into Th1 effectors via IL-12
  2. macrophage activation by T cell-derived signals (IFNy and CD40-CD40L)
  3. Antibodies (against TB for ex.)
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10
Q

cells infected by intracellular bacteria can also be lysed by which cell

A

CD8 cytotoxic cells (CTL)

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11
Q

how does the innate immunity respond to fungi

A
  1. neutrophils and macrophages phagocytose fungi
  2. ILC1 and ILC3 are protective
  3. Th1 and Th17 responses are protective
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12
Q

what increases risk of oral candidiasis or thrush

A

wearing upper dentures or dry mouth

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13
Q

in immune response to viruses, what does type I IFN lead to

A

antiviral state and activated NK cells

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14
Q

T/F for virus infection, innate and adaptive immune responses block infection and lead to elimination of infected cells

A

True

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15
Q

what is involved with the innate immune response to viruses

A

IFNa and NK cell killing

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16
Q

what do antibodies do in immune response to viruses

A
  1. neutralize virus
  2. activate complement
  3. lead to opsonization of viral particles
17
Q

what kills viro-infected cells

A

CD8 T cells

18
Q

what is involved in the adaptive immunity to protozoa

A
  1. macrophage activation by Th1 cell-derived cytokines
    - activation of Th2 cells results in increased protozoa survival and exacerbation of lesions (because stops macrophage activation)
  2. cytotoxic T cell responses against lytic protozoa
19
Q

what is involved in the adaptive immunity to helminths

A
  • activation of Th2 cells results in killing of helminth not infected cells
20
Q

in adaptive immunity to helminths, production of IL-4 induces what

A

IgE

21
Q

in adaptive immunity to helminths, production of IL-5 stimulates what

A

eosinophil development and activation

22
Q

in adaptive immunity to helminths, how are they killed

A

degranulation of eosinophils

23
Q

what are the consequence of micro-induced immune response

A
  1. granuloma and immune complex deposit
  2. inflammation
24
Q

what are the three ways microbes evade the immune system

A
  1. antigenic variation
  2. inhibition of complement activation
  3. resistance to phagocytosis
25
Q

how are viruses able to have antigenic variation

A
  1. point mutations (antigenic drift)
  2. reassortment of virus RNA genomes (antigenic shift) responsible for influenza pandemics
26
Q

what is the most effective vaccine

A

production of high-affinity neutralizing antibodies and memory cells

27
Q

what does caries vaccine do

A
  1. enhanced levels of antigen specific secretory IgA
  2. reduction of strep. mutans in plaque