Innate immunity 2 Flashcards
What types of response is inflammatory
Innate
What causes an inflammatory response
Microorganisms entering the body through skin.
What types of cells are involved in inflammation
Mast cells
Neutrophils
Describe how inflammation works
Mast cells (in tissue) release chemical signals to attract other cells. Neutrophils enter blood from bone marrow and cling to capillary walls. The signals tell the blood to slow down neutrophils, to dilate and become ‘leakier’. Neutrophils leak through to tissue (diapedesis) and follow trail to injury site.
What is diapedesis
When neutrophils ‘leak’ out of capillaries into tissue
What is a brief overview of stages of phagocytosis
1 - labelling 2- Engulfing 3 - Fusing 4 - Digesting 5 - exocytosis
Describe stage 1 - labelling
Antibodies label what should be eaten (opsonisation). Phagocyte adheres to pathogen
Describe stage 2 - engulfing
Forms pseudopods that engulfs pathogen in phagocytic vesicle
Describe stage 3 - fusing
Phagocytic vesicle fuses with lysosome vesicle to form a phagolysosome
Describe stage 4 - digesting
Toxic compounds and lysosomal enzymes digest/destroy pathogens
Describe stage 5 - exocytosis
Exocytosis of vesicles removes indigestible residue.
How does the lysosome digest the pathogen
Low pH - acidic environment. Produce reactive oxygen (hydrogen peroxide) and reactive nitrogen (nitric oxide). Filled with enzymes
What enzymes do lysosomes contain
Protease - digests proteins
Lipase - digests lipids
Nuclease - digests nucleic acid
What is the complement cascade
Series of enzymatic reactions to clear pathogens from blood and tissue. 9 major protein complexes
What does the complement system do
Labels pathogens (opsonisation) Recruits phagocytes (chemotaxis) Destroys pathogens (lysis)