innate+humoral responce and cell mediated immunity Flashcards

1
Q

What are phagocytes

A

Cells that engulf and destroy foreign cells

They are non specific (no immune memory is required or generated)

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2
Q

How are pathogens recognisable

A

They are recognisable due to pathogen associated patterns (pamps) on the surface
Pamps bind to patter recognition receptors (PRR) on the phagocyte

phagocytosis follows this recognition

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3
Q

How does phagocytosis work

A
  • The ingested pathogen is held within a phagosome
  • A lysosome fuses with the phagosomes creating a phagolysosome
  • The pathogen is destroyed by hydrolytic enzymes and the debris is removed from the cell
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4
Q

what is phagocytosis an example of

A

It is an example of endocytosis

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5
Q

What is the cell division of lymphocytes like and what does this mean

A

They produce non identical daughter cells this means each lymphocyte has a different T-cell receptor

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6
Q

Where are t-cells made and stored

A

T-cells are made in the bone marrow but are stored in lymph nodes in the lymphocytes

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7
Q

What are the steps of clonal selection in the innate response

A
  • ACPs containing the pathogen after phagocytosis presents antigens (MHT ll) and travels to the lymph nodes
  • T-h (helper) cells are in the lymph nodes
  • The APCs antigen (MHC ll) bind to the complementary t-h cell receptor
  • The T -cell is then activated and can undergo mitosis to divide
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8
Q

What do cytotoxic t-cells do and what is the process linking

why is this important

A

cytotoxic t-cells kill infected or damaged cells
- cells which are no specialised APCs can present an antigen (MHC l) on their cell surface
- T-cells bind specifically to the antigens on the surface an initiate the cells death by the use of perforin destroying the cell membrane allowing substances to freely move in and out of the cell
This is important against viruses and other intracellular parasites

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9
Q

what are the 3 ways t-cells can act

A
  • perforin = destroys the plasma membrane
  • granzymes - stimulates apoptosis
  • lymphotoxin - disrupts the intracellular metabolism
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10
Q

What do t-cells do when they are active

A

the cells stimulate B-cells to become active
the cells also produce cytokines which accelerate the B-cells

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11
Q

What is clonal selection like in B-cells

A
  • B-cells are activated by a similar method to T-cells
  • Antigens on the pathogen bind to specific complimentary receptors on the B-cell
  • The B-cell then becomes active but has to present the antigen to a Th-cell to become complete activation
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12
Q

What is the colonial expansion like in a B-cell

why is this important

A

The active b-cell differentiates into plasma cells and memory cells

the cells proliferate to create many copies

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13
Q

Why is colonial selection important in B-cells

A

crucial for an adaptive immune system ensuring only the B-cells needed are activated

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14
Q

Describe how presentation of a virus antigen leads to the secretion of an antibody against the virus?

A

t-helper cells bind with the antigen via its complementary receptor. The t-cells are then activated and can complete the activation of a B-cell which then divides producing plasma cells.

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15
Q

What are the three roles of antibodies

A
  • neutralisation = preventing pathogens from entering the cell
  • opsonisation = stimulating the action of phagocytes on the pathogen
  • Agglutination = Clumping pathogens together, impairing their functions and increasing the likelihood of phagocytosis
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16
Q

What do regulatory t-cells do

A

Moderate the immune response to ensure that autoimmune disease does not develop

the mechanisms are unclear, but inhibitory cytokines probably play a role

17
Q

What do cytokines do

A

speed up B-cells