specific immune system Flashcards

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1
Q

define antigens

A

identifying chemical on the surface of a cell that triggers an immune response

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2
Q

explain the difference between self and non-self antigens

A
  • self: on surface of your own cells
  • non-self: on surface of cells of pathogens
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3
Q

define antibody

A

y-shaped glycoprotein made by B cells of the immune system in response to presence of an antigen

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4
Q

define antigen-antibody complex

A

complex formed by binding of an antibody to an antigen

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5
Q

define lymphocyte

A

WBC that make up the specific immune system

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6
Q

define specific immune response

A

acquired immune response triggered by antigens which is able to distinguish between different pathogens

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7
Q

describe the structure of antibodies

A
  • glycoproteins of two identical long pp chains - heavy chains and 2 shorter identical chains - light chains
  • chains held by disulfide bonds
  • hinge region provides flexibility - allowing one antibody to bind to two separate antigens, one at each binding site
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8
Q

describe 4 ways in which antibodies defend the body

A
  • opsonins: antigen-antibody complex easily engulfed and digested by phagocytes
  • pathogens can no longer effectively invade host cells when they are part of antigen-antibody complex
  • agglutinins - cause pathogens carrying complexes to clump together - prevents them from spreading and easier to engulf multiple at same time
  • anti-toxins - make toxins harmless
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9
Q

define cell-mediated immunity

A

T lymphocytes respond to cells of an organism that have been changed in some way

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10
Q

what is cell-mediated immunity effective against

A

virus infections and early cancers

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11
Q

describe the process of cell-mediated immunity

A
  • macrophages phagocytose pathogens, process antigens and form antigen-presenting cells
  • T helper cell with complementary surface receptors to non-self antigens binds to APC
  • T helper cell is stimulated to undergo mitosis to form many clones that differentiate into:
  • T killer cells - destroy pathogen using perforins and toxins that trigger apoptosis
  • T helper cells - secrete interleukins to stimulate phagocytosis and B cell division
  • T memory cells - immunological memory of pathogen
  • T regulatory cells - suppress immune response when pathogen removed
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12
Q

define humoural immunity

A

B lymphocytes produce antibodies in response to antigens pathogens outside cells

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13
Q

suggest what humoural immunity is particularly effective against

A

bacteria and fungi

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14
Q

describe the process of humoural immunity

A
  • B cell with complementary surface receptor to pathogen binds to it and engulfs
  • antigens are processed, B cell becomes APC
  • T helper cell with complementary receptor to presented antigen binds to the APC - clonal selection
  • T helper cells induced to secrete interleukins
  • interleukins stimulate B cell to divide by mitosis, produce many clones of that B cell variant - clonal expansion
  • the B cell then differentiates into:
  • plasma cells - secrete antibodies that fit the antigens on pathogens
  • B memory cells - retain immunological memory of that pathogen, stored in lymphatic tissue
  • secretion of many specific antibodies by plasma cells that circulate in blood and act as: opsonins, agglutinins, anti-toxins act against pathogens - defence
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15
Q

define clonal selection

A

exposure to a specific antigen selectively stimulates the proliferation of the cell with the appropriate antibody to form numerous clones of these specific antibody-forming cells

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16
Q

define proliferation

A

rapid growth or production of cells by multiplication of parts

17
Q

define clonal expasion

A

mass proliferation of antibody-producing cells by clonal expansion

18
Q

summarise the role of antigen presentation in specific immune response.

A

ensures that specific immune response can be initiated through recognition by T cells

19
Q

describe the role of cell signalling in the specific immune response.

A

cell signalling that occurs - interleukins

20
Q

define primary immune response

A

relatively slow production of small number of correct antibodies the first time a pathogen is encountered

21
Q

define secondary immune response

A

relatively fast production of very large quantities of the correct antibodies a second time a pathogen is encountered as a result of immunological memory