Micro Study Guide Flashcards
Define Immune Response
Overall actions and interactions of the immune system to provide immunity beginning w/ host/foreign encounter and leading to cellular/chemical defensive actions.
How much of blood is RBCs?
How much of blood is WBCs?
4-6mill/mcL
4500-11000/mcL
Basophils respond to ? and make up __%
Eosinophils respond to ? and make up __%
Neutrophils respond to ? and make up __%
B- inflammatory .5-1%
E- allergic 1-5
N- inflammatory 45-75%
How fast do neutrophils mature?
How long do they circulate?
Where do the adhere to and wait?
10^10/day
circ for 6-10hrs
adhere to endothelium
Monocytes mature into ? 2 cells?
What signals do they respond to?
What % of blood do they make up?
macrophages and dendritic
inflammatory
2-8%
What are the 3 types of lymphocytes?
How fast do they mature?
How long do they circulate before adhering and waiting?
T B NKC
10^9
Completes cycle in 1-2 days
1% circulate, the rest adhere to blood/lymph vessels
What is the largest of the phagocytic cells?
Macrophages- monocyte->macrophage (10x bigger)
major phagocytic role, lower numbers
Broad specificity allows major line of defense against microbes or abnormal host cells
What is the function of the lymph nodes?
Lymph fluid carrying Ags and APCs through nodes and encounter/activate pre-committed lymphocytes
Respond to local and regional infections
What is the function of the spleen?
Blood-borne antigens and APCs travel through organ where they encounter/activate pre-committed lymphocytes.
Responds to systemic infections.
What are the MHC complexes?
Proteins on surface of blood/tissue cells that identify cells as belonging to a specific individual.
Recognition of self vs non-self
What are the two classes of MHC complexes?
1- one aa chain, on almost every cell in body
II- two aa chains, only on certain cells of immune system. Particularly dendritic, macrophage and B cells
How do MHC complexes recognize cells?
Antigens recognized by T cells when presented to MHC molecules
What are the main characteristics of the dendritic cells?
Specialized cells predominantly located in tissues exposed to external environment and participate in initiating antigen recognition and immune responses
List 6 places where dendritic cells can be found and the names of those cells
Langerhans- skin Intestine- various Alveolar macrophage- lung Kupffer cells- liver Microglial cells- brain interdigitating- lymph nodes/spleen
Major characteristics of antigens?
What is their chemical nature?
What are their typical minimal size?
foreign substance which stimulates an immune response when introduced to the body and reacts/ binds with antibodies or T cell receptors.
Protein w/ complex 3D configuration
Molecular weight usually greater than 10,000
What is an epitope?
What determines their quality?
Specific part of immunogen that determines the exact antibody to produce.
Portion of Ag that binds w/ antibody or TCR
Different epitopes ( even on same Ag) will produce different antibodies
Quality determined by exposure and 3D shape
Define antibody
Characteristics of antibody
immunoglobulin, 20% of plasma proteins
antigen-specific glycoprotein
Y shaped w/ Fab and Fc sites
A D E G M
What is the role of the Fab site?
antigen specific
specific site attachment assists w/ inactivation
“lock and key” specificity for specific antigen
How many Fab sites per immunoglobulin molecule?
How many Fc sites?
2 Fab per monomeric molecule
1 Fc- binds to phagocyte
Major characteristics and differences of Innate and Adaptive responses?
Innate: non-specific, general recognition, inflammatory
Adaptive: specific response w/ chemicals and cellular actions
Innate: physical and chemical barriers, phagocytosis
Adaptive: T cells, B cells, memory
Describe phagocytosis
antigenic substance is engulfed and digested by WBC
macrophage or neutrophil
chemotaxis- C5a
Adhere, Ingest, Digest
What are the significant surface molecules on T cells and what are their roles?
CD3- identifies mature cell
CD28- receives activation signal
CD40 receptor
LFA-1- adhesion mol of T cells
What are the significant surface molecules of B cells and what are their roles?
CD40- binds w/ receptor on T cell
CD19,20,21- identification
CD80/86- when acting as an APC
Where do T cells mature and concentrate?
Where do B cells mature and concentrate?
T- Thymus->nodes
B- marrow-> peripheral lymph tissues (spleen, MALT, nodes, marrow)