Immunological Memory Flashcards
What is the difference between the primary and secondary immune responses of a particular infection?
There is a memory response associated with the second exposure to a pathogen, therefore the immune response is quicker and stronger in general
What are the characteristics of a memory B-cell response?
Protective memory is covered by long-lived plasma cells, which can secrete specific antibodies from memory
Reactive memory is provided by memory B-cells
Why are naive B-cells inhibited and memory B-cells activated in secondary immune response?
The response will be quicker and stronger with memory B-cells- they have already hypermutated and exist.
What type of antibody remains in circulation after the primary response? Why is this?
IgG, in small amounts. This is to inhibit naive B-cells via the inhibitory F-cy receptor
Why does the memory response struggle with pathogens changing strains constantly?
The memory response grows weaker with each strain encounter as it loses specificity each time
What are the characteristics of effector memory T-cells?
Circulate in the peripheral tissues and already differentiated and ready to act
What are the characteristics of central memory T-cells?
These circulate in secondary lymphoid tissues and not differentiated but more ready to act than a naive T-cell