Immunology Flashcards
What are the primary tissues of the immune system?
Spleen, thymus, bone marrow
What happens during an infection?
Immune system activates to defend the body, several characters working together
What components of the immune system are related to specific immunity?
T cells, B cells
What are the players involved in innate immunity?
Granulocytes (neutrophils, eosinophils, basophils), macrophages, natural killer cells, complement proteins
What are B and T cells derived from? Where do they develop? What immunity are their responses involved in?
progenitor cells in the bone marrow
B cells develop in the bone marrow; T cells develop in the thymus gland
B cell responses related to humoral immunity
T cell responses related to cellular immunity
What is humoral immunity?
B cell immunity
Fights bacteria and viruses in body fluids with antibodies from plasma and lymph
What two cells do B cells differentiate into?
Antibody producing cells, memory cells
What is the structure of immunoglobulins?
one of 5 heavy chains
2 light chains
What are the 5 isotypes of immunoglobulins?
IgM, IgD, IgG, IgA, and IgE
What is the role of T cells?
Lysis of virally infected cells and rejection of foreign tissue grafts
Can function as “killer”, “helper”, or “suppressor”
What is the significance of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC)?
These are the molecules tested in transplant donors/recipients
What are some key features of the innate immune system?
Confers broad protection against pathogens and can act without previous exposure to that pathogen
Inflammatory responses is hallmark
What are some clinical features of immunodeficiency?
Increased susceptibility to infection
chronic/recurrent infections without explanation
infection with organism of low virulence
infection of unusual severity
autoimmune or inflammatory disease
What are some hallmarks of primary immune deficiency disorders?
Predominance of males M:F 5:1
>120 conditions with known genetic causes
most diagnosed in infancy but 40% diagnosed in adolescence or early adulthood
What are the three subgroups of primary immune deficiency disorders?
antibody deficiency disorders
combined immune deficiency disorders
other well-defined immune deficiency disorders