Midterm 1 Unit 1 Flashcards
Unit 1
what proteins and cells make up the innate and acquired immune system?
Humoral cells and proteins
What are the two ways the immune system is regulated to ensure an appropriate response to a pathogen?
The immune system is regulated by self-regulation and the neuroendocrine system to allow for the correct response to a pathogen and maintain homeostasis
sensitization to an environmental antigen causes?
allergy
sensitization to a self-antigen cause?
autoimmune disorder
In what way is the immune system acting as a sensory sense (explain how the immune system is able to alert the CNS of a pathogen)
The immune cells detect a pathogen and will release an immune signal like a cytokine and neuropeptide. The neuropeptide binds to the respected neural cell. The binding to the neural cell activates the neural cell and sends the signal to the CNS that there is a pathogen. The CNS will release an endocrine signal and a neural signal, this is known as the neuroendocrine-immune axis
List 3 of the ways that we are able to provide physiological or physical protection against pathogens.
- Low pH
- Low O2
- Sloughing off non-viable epithelial cells
- Mucosal flow from the skin
- Increase body temperature
- Physical processes such as vomiting, diarrhea and intestinal peristalsis
- Colonization of the commensal microbes
What happens if the physiological and physical barriers are broken through?
The innate immune system will be activated
What arm of the immune system causes an inflammatory response?
The innate immune system
What triggers the innate immune system to have an inflammatory response?
When the innate immune system is triggered by danger signals
How is a danger signal detected by the innate immune system?
The pattern recognition receptors on the cell membrane detect/recognize the microbe-associated membrane pattern or the host alarm signal from a damaged host cell
What limits the specificity of the innate immune system?
The innate immune system does not have immunological memory and thus can’t remember a pathogen and enhance its specificity. The innate immune system can only do PRR
What occurs if the infection becomes systematic?
if the inflammatory response by the innate immune system is not able to stop the pathogen what happens is it becomes systematic and is able to spread over the body, becoming systematic. The spreading will lead to Systematic Inflammatory Response Syndrome, which can lead to sepsis
How does long-term immunity occur? Explain the process.
Long-term immunity occurs via the acquired immune system which can be highly specific. The acquired immune system will act on microbial proteins (antigens) in the form of immunoglobulins (BCR on B-lymphocytes) or B cell antibodies like plasma cells or (TCR of T-lymphocytes) T cells.
The acquired immune system will respond with an antibody medicated immune response for an extracellular pathogen or an cellular mediated immune response for an
intracellular pathogen.
What immune response occurs for an extracellular pathogen?
antibody-mediated immune response
What immune response occurs for an intracellular pathogen?
cell-mediated immune response