lecture 8 - immunity to meningitis Flashcards
What type of bacterial colonisation most commonly leads to meningitis?
Nasopharynx colonisation
What type of cell in the epithelium takes up bacterial antigen during pneumococcal colonisation?
M cells
How does the epithelium defend against invading colonising bacteria in the respiratory tract?
M cells take up antigen allowing antibodies to be made by B lymphocytes and secreted across the epithelium to protect again colonisation/invasive infection
What are the 2 steps by which colonising bacteria enter the body to cause invasive disease?
Translocation across epithelium, bloodstream invasion
What are the 3 mechanisms of complement activation?
Lectin pathway, Classical pathway, Alternative pathway
What activates complement in the lectin pathway?
lectins/microbial glycans (carbohydrates) on the surface of pathogens
What activates complement in the classical pathway?
The binding of antibodies to complement
What activates complement in the alternative pathway?
The deposition of spontaneously formed C3b (complement protein 3b) on microbial surfaces
What is the common product of all pathways of complement activation?
C3 convertase
What is C3 convertase?
Protease that activates C3 complement proteins in the complement cascade
How is the lectin pathway of the complement system activated?
Collectins made in the liver circulate in the blood and bind to microbial glycans which activates complement
What is the key collectin the Lectin pathway of complement activation?
MBL (mannose binding lectin)
What does C3 convertase cleave, and what are the products?
Cleaves C3 to C3a and C3b
How does the complement system aid in phagocytosis?
C3b is deposited onto pathogens and is recognised by complement receptors on phagocytes
How does the complement system causes pathogen cell lysis?
Cascade leads to the formation of the MAC (membrane attack complex)