Intro Flashcards

1
Q

What are the mechanisms employed by the body to avoid invasion or infections? (3 general ways)

A
  • Physical barriers
  • Innate immunity
  • Adaptive immunity
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2
Q

How does the adaptive immune response take care of bacterial invaders?

A

antibodies bind to bacteria and mark them for destruction

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3
Q

What are antibodies?

A

proteins that circulate in body fluids, especially in the blood stream

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4
Q

What are two forms of adaptive immunity?

A
  • Antibody mediated

- Cell mediated

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5
Q

How does cell mediated immunity work?

A

employs cells that destroy abnormal cells such as those infected by viruses.
- mainly directed against viruses

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6
Q

What is an adaptive immunity?

A

the immune system remembers prior exposure to a foreign invader and mounts a faster and more effective response on subsequent exposure to that invader.

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7
Q

What are the physical barriers of the body?

A

tears, saliva, vomiting,
Respiratory system: mucous, cilia, coughing, turbulence
Skin: desiccation, desquamation, fatty acids, normal flora
Digestive system: mucus, fluid flow, lysozyme, proteolytic enzymes, diarrhea, anaerobic conditions, normal flora, gastric pH

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8
Q

What cells are involved in innate immunity?

A

macrophages, dendritic cells, neutrophils, natural killer cells

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9
Q

What are the cells involved in adaptive immunity?

A

T and B cells

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10
Q

What is the specificity of innate and adaptive immunities?

A

Innate: common microbial structures
Adaptive: unique antigens

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11
Q

True or false? Both the innate and adaptive immunities can be overwhelmed.

A

True - however adaptive immunity is RARELY overwhelmed.

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12
Q

What is the difference between serum and plasma?

A

serum is the cell free liquid of blood minus the clotting factors while plasma is cell free liquid of blood with clotting factors

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13
Q

How can antibody-mediated immunity be transferred?

A
  • artificially

- naturally

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14
Q

What is the common parent cell of immune related cells?

A

pluripotent stem cells (CD34+)

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15
Q

What can a monoblast differentiate into?

A

monocyte or dendritic cell

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16
Q

What can a myeloblast differentiate into?

A

basophils, eosinophils, neutrophils

17
Q

What can a myeloid progenitor cell differentiate into?

A
  • megakaryocyte
  • erythroblast
  • myeloblast
  • monoblast
18
Q

What can a lymphoid progenitor cell differentiate into?

A

t-cell precursor cell or b-cell precursor cell

19
Q

What can a t-cell precursor cell differentiate into?

A

natural killer cells and T-lymphocytes