Section 2: Immunology Flashcards
What is an antigen?
- Recognised as non-self/ foreign which can stimulate an immune response and lead to the production of antibodies
- Proteins on the surface of cells
What do antigens allow the immune system to identify?
- Pathogens
- Cells from other organisms of the same species
- Abnormal body cells
- Toxins released from bacteria
What is phagocytosis?
- Phagocyte recognises foreign antigen on pathogen and binds to the antigen
- Phagocyte engulfs pathogen by surrounding it with its cell-sirface membrane
- Pathogen contained in vacuole/vesicle/phagosome in cytoplasm of phagocyte
- Lysosome fuses with phagosome and releases lysozymes into the phagosome
- These hydrolyse/digest the pathogen
- Phagocyte becomes antigen presenting and stimulates specific immune response
How do T-lymphocytes respond to foreign antigen?
- T-lymphocytes recognise antigen presenting cells in phagocytosis
- Specific T helper cell with receptor complementary to specific antigen binds to it, becoming activated and dividing rapidly
What are the types of cells that T helper cells activate?
- Stimulate B-cells for the humoral response
- Stimulate cytotoxic T cells to kill infected cells by producing perforin
- Stimulate phagocytes to engulf pathogens by phagocytosis
What is the response of B-lymphocytes in humoral response?
- Clonal selection
- Specific B-cell binds to APC and releases cytokines. Divides rapidly by mitosis to form clones
- Some become B plasma cells for primary response
- Some become B memory cells - secondary immune response
What is the primary response?
- Produces antibodies slower and at lower concentration because
- Not many B-cells available to make antibody
- T helpers need to activate B plasma cells to make antibodies - take time
What is the secondary response?
- Produces antibodies faster and at higher concentration because
- B and T memory cells present
- B memory cells undergo mitosis quicker
What are antibodies?
- Quaternary structured protein
- Secreted by B - lymphocytes
- Binds specifically to antigens forming an antigen-antibody complex
Describe and explain how the structure of an antibody relates to its function.
- Primary structure of protein
- Determines folds in secondary structure determines specific tertiary structure and position of bonds
- Quaternary structure comprised of 4 polypeptide chains
- Enables specific shaped variable region which is complementary to the antigen
- Enables antigen-antibody complex to form
How do antibodies work to destroy pathogens?
- Binds to 2 pathogens at a time forming an antigen-antibody complex
- Enables antibodies to clump the pathogens together - agglutination
- Phagocytes bind to antibodies and phagocytose many pathogens at once
What is a vaccination?
- Injection of antigens
- From dead and weakened pathogens
- Stimulates memory cells
- Can lead to symptoms because pathogen can be active and reproduce to produce toxins
How are vaccines used to protect people?
- Memory cells produced
- On reinfection to the same antigen, secondary response therefore antibodies produced faster
- Leads to destruction
How do vaccines lead to herd immunity?
- Large proportion of population vaccinated
- Makes it more difficult for pathogen to spread
- More immune so fewer to spread
- Fewer susceptible
What are the differences between active and passive immunity?
- Active: Initial exposure to antigen. Passive: No exposure to antigen
- Active: Antibody is produced and secreted by plasma cells. Passive: Antibody introduced into body from another organism (breast milk/ placenta)
- Active: Slow. Passive: Fast
- Active: Long term immunity. Passive: Short term immunity
What are the ethical issues surrounding vaccines?
- Tested on animals before humans - can feel pain
- Tested on humans - volunteers put themselves in risk. Vaccine may not work
- Can have side effects
- Expensive
What is the effect of antigen variability on disease?
- Change in antigen shape
- Not recognised by B memory cell - no plasma cells/ antibodies
- Not immune
- Must undergo primary immune response
What is the effect of antigen variability on disease prevention?
- Change in antigen shape
- Existing antibodies can’t bind to changed antigens - no antigen-antibody complex
What are the use of monoclonal antibodies?
- Antibody produced from a single group of genetically identical B-cells
- Bind to specific antigen - has a variable region with a specific tertiary structure
How are monoclonal antibodies used in treating cancer cells?
- Monoclonal antibodies made to be complementary to antigens specific to cancer cells
- Anti-cancer drug attached to antibody
- Antibody binds to cancer cells
- Delivers attached anti-cancer drug directly to specific cells so fewer side effects
How are Monoclonal antibodies used in pregnancy tests?
- Pregnant women have hormone hCG in their urine
- There are 3 different antibodies parts
- If pregnant: hCG binds to antibodies in application area (complex). Then binds to antibodies at position 2 = blue line
- Not pregnant: No hCG so doesnt bind to antibodies in application area so not binding at position 2. Binds to position 3 = control