Micro_Chap24 – Flashcards
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Unlock answersImmunity |
Ability of an organism to resist infection |
Where do all cells involved in immunity originate from? |
Stem cells in bone marrow |
What does the Immune system do? |
protect against foreign cells and macromolecules |
Antigen/ immunogen: |
foreign cell or macromolecule that induces immune system |
types of immunity? |
naturally acquired immunity artificially acquired immunity |
Naturally acquired active immunity: |
host produces antibodies & T cells - can last from years to life time |
Naturally acquired passive immunity: |
-when antibodies are passed from one host to another ex. antibodies through placenta from mother to fetus. -lasts few weeks to months |
Artificially acquired active immunity: |
-result of vaccination -host makes antibodies that can last for years. |
what do vaccinations/ immunizations contain? |
1. toxoid 2. killed bacteria cell 3.inactivated virus 4. live cells 5. purified polysaccharide |
Toxoid
ex.? |
chemically modified exotoxin retains antigenicity but loses toxicity.
ex. Tetanus, Diphtheria |
Killed bacteria cell
ex.? |
formaldehyde, heat
ex. Cholera (dead Vibrio cells) |
Inactivated virus
ex.
|
Formaldehyde
ex. Salk polio vaccine, influenza |
live cells/ virus
ex.
|
attenuated: has lost its virulence
ex. Tuberculosis, chicken pox most effective way
|
Purified polysaccharide
ex.
|
from the bacterial cell
ex. Meningitis |
Artificially acquired passive immunity: |
Host receives antibodies (antiserum) from another host that has formed antibodies against a specific antigen -snakebite victim -lasts only few weeks |
Phagocytic leukocytes do what? (neutrophils & macrophages + monocytes) |
engulf and destroy pathogens contains lysosomes (inclusions contain H2O2, lysozyme, proteases, phosphatases, nuclease, and lipase) |
Neutrophils aka |
PMNs --polymorphonuclear leukocytes |
Macrophages and monocytes when is it called a monocyte? what does a macrophage do? |
- called monocyte when circulating -differentiates into macrophage when enters tissues -Macrophage: antigen presenting cell > presents peptide antigens to T cells to activate a specific immune response. |
Adaptive immunity: |
Immune system reacts to specific antigens (foreign proteins, sugars, chemicals) -retains "memory" of these antigens
|
Humoral Immunity: |
production of antibody proteins -each binds different antigens |
Cellular immunity: |
T cells that bind different antigens -kill pathogens, control antibody production |
Immunogenicity: |
Ability of antigen to elicit immune response. |
What is an ex. of a good antigen? |
Proteins: b/c they are fixed and nonrepetitive shape |
Immune reaction is specific. blood types: type A attacks type B blood cell antigen AB blood has both antigens, won't make antibodies ; |
Antigen Presenting Cell (APC) |
Phagocytic cells that present processed antigens to T cells. |
Antibody (Immunoglobin) what is it? produced by what? interacts with what? |
A soluble protein produced by B cells; interacts with antigen |
After ingestion of a pathogen, what happens with phagocytes and B cell lymphocytes? |
phagocytes and B cell lymphocytes present antigens on the surface to T cell lymphocytes |
The ingestion of the pathogen results in? |
Cell mediated immunity; or Antibody mediated / Humoral immunity |
Cell mediated immunity involves? |
T cell lymphocytes |
What does T cell lymphocytes do? |
Mainly protects against tumor cells and virus-infected cells |
Where are T cells derived from? |
;Bone marrow stem cells |
Where do these stem cells migrate? |
to the Thymus |
In the thymus, what do these stem cells do? |
differentiate into T lymphocytes. |
When phagocytes digest pathogens, _____ from pathogen are bound to the surface of phagocyte. |
polypeptides |
What happens when an APC binds to a T cell? |
the T cells differentiate |
What are the major classes of T cells? ; |
1. Helper T cells (h1,h2,h0) 2. Cytotoxic T cells 3. Memory T cells 4. T cell receptors |
Th1: |
activates Tc cells |
Th2: |
Binds B cells ; activates them to divide into plasma and memory cells |
Th0: |
Undifferentiated T cells |
Cytotoxic T cells |
Destroy tumor cells and infected cells by releasing cytotoxin - also recognizes grafted tissues ; organs as foreign |
Memory T cells |
allows host to respond to 2nd exposure quickly |
T cell receptors |
receptor that binds antigen specifically. |
Structure? |
2 peptides (alpha ; beta) each with constant and variable domain |
which structure binds the antigen? |
Variable domains |
Major Histocompatibility Complex proteins |
"self" proteins on surface of cells |
What does MHC proteins do? |
bind to antigen |
T cell receptors recognizes ______ |
antigen/ MHC protein |
Class 1 MHC proteins on surface of all nucleated cells presents what? |
intracellular antigens to Tc cells |
Class 2 MHC proteins on surface of antigen-presenting cells presents what? |
Extracellular antigens to Th cells |
When do T cells become activated? |
When antigen/ MHC binds to T cell receptor |
T cell; T cell receptor; Peptide antigen (epitope); MHC protein; antigen presenting cell |
Tc cells destroy what? |
Antigen presenting cell |
Th1 cells do what? |
recruit macrophages to destroy antigen bearing cell. |
What are attacked by the Th1 cell activated macrophages? |
tumor cells transplanted organs tissues |
When antibodies bind to antigens, they _____them. ; |
inactivate |
antibodies are most active against |
bacteria, bacterial toxins, and viruses in blood stream |
What do antibodies recognize if not the entire pathogen? ; |
regions called Epitopes. |
binding of an antibody does not directly kill the cell. |
Antibody binding: 1. activates _____ system 2. Enhances __________ 3. causes _________ 4. neutralizes _______ |
1. complement 2. phagocytosis 3. agglutination (clumping together) 4. antigens |
Complement system |
group of proteins that act together to enhance immune system |
Complement can: 1. increase _______ 2. Attract and activate _______ 3. cause _______ |
1. inflammation 2. phagocytes 3. lysis |
Opsonization |
process of enhancing phagocytosis by binding both to a microbe and phagocyte, bringing them closer in proximity. |
what region allows each fragment to bind antigen independently? |
Hinge region |
Antibody structure? |
Y shaped protein |
IgG consists of how many polypeptide chains? ; |
4 |
The 2 large/ heavy chains are identical ; held together by; |
2 disulfide bonds |
The 2 small/ light chains are also identical and held together by; |
1 disulfide bond |
Antibody has Constant and Variable domains. |
What region does the antigen bind? |
Variable regions |
Each IgG can bind 2 antigens. |
What defines the class of antibody? |
The heavy chain in the constant domain |
5 classes of antibody: |
IgG IgA IgM IgE IgD |
IgG |
Most abundant- 80% of Ig in serum Only antibody that can be transferred through placenta Gamma heavy chains |
IgA |
Predominant antibody in secretions (saliva, tears, milk, mucus.) Dimer Alpha heavy chain |
IgM |
2nd most abundant; 1st class of antibody made in response to infection Aggregate of 5 molecules attached by disulfide bonds ; J chain protein can bind up to 10 antigens Mu heavy chains ; |
IgE |
Low concentrations, responsible for allergies binding of antigen to IgE causes release of histamine (allergies) Epsilon heavy chain |
IgD; |
Found on the surface of B cells Binding of antigen to these antibodies stimulates B cells to produce antibody IgG Delta heavy chains. |
B cell is a type of ? |
Lymphocyte that makes antibodies |
Where are B cells made and matured? |
in bone marrow |
B cells disperse through: ; |
blood and lymph |
B cells collect in: |
Lymph nodes and spleen. |
1st step in making antibodies |
b cell must phagocytize foreign cell so that polypeptides from that cell are bound onto B cell surface. ; |
2nd step to make antibodies |
Th cell binds to the polypeptide on B cell, this triggers B cell to divide. |
B cells differentiate into: ; |
Plasma cells and memory cells |
Which antibody is made first, then what? ; |
IgM first, then IgG |
Isotope switching/ class switching |
Predominant antibody produced becomes IgG instead of IgM |
Immune response diseases ; |
Hypersensitivities ; super antigens |
Hypersensitivity type 1 |
results from 2 or more exposures to same allergen 1st exposure - B cell produce IgE; IgE binds mast cells and basophils 2nd exposure - Mast cells and basophils release histamine |
Histamine produces what?; causes what? ; |
produces prostaglandin, leukotrienes causes allergy symptoms. |
anaphylactic shock |
constriction of airways and drop in blood pressure ; |
treatment for allergies: ________ to neutralize histamine ________ to reduce inflammation ___________ to counter effects of histamine ____________- allergy shots that shift antibody production from IgE to IgG |
1. antihistamines 2.steroids 3. adrenalin 4. desensitization |
Type II Hypersensitivity: antibodies bind to foreign ________ antigen -blood transfusion recipients -Rh- mother has antibodies to Rh+ fetus -can occur within hours |
cell surface |
Type III hypersensitivity: antibodies bind to ________antigen -large amounts of antigen- antibody complex are formed -triggers complement cascade -stimulate mast cells -in response to certain antibiotics -can take weeks to occur |
soluble |
Type IV-Delayed type hypersensitivity |
result of sensitivity to chemicals or microbes Th1 cells release cytokines that activate macrophages, NK cells, and Tc cells takes few days to occur typical antigens: M. tuberculosis; chemicals that covalently bind to skin creating new antigens symptoms: hardening swelling, reddening pain and localized heating |
type 2 hypersensitivity autoimmune diseases |
autoantibodies Rheumatic fever hemolytic anemia Graves disease Myasthenia gravis |
autoantibodies |
antibodies that interact with self antigens, destroying self-molecules |
Rheumatic fever |
Autoantibodies to cardiac cells, damages heart valves caused by similarity between epitope in M protein of Streptococcus pyogenes and cardiac tissue --(antigenic mimicry) |
hemolytic anemia |
autoantibodies to Rh blood group; destroys RBC |
Graves disease |
Autoantibodies to thyroid stimulating hormone receptor causing hyperthyroidism |
Myasthenia gravis |
autoantibodies to acetylcholine receptor; causes progressive muscle weakness
|
Type III diseases : antibodies bind soluble proteins, creating insoluble complex leading to complement and inflammation |
Rheumatoid arthritis Systemic lupus erythematosis |
Rheumatoid arthritis |
complexes deposited in joints; inflammation & destruction of cartilage |
Systemic lupus erythematosis |
complexes deposited in kidney, lungs, & spleen |
type IV autoimmune diseases : T cells respond to self antigens |
Multiple sclerosis Type 1 diabetes |
Multiple sclerosis |
T cells attack myelin protein, destroying covering of neurons
|
type 1 diabetes |
t cells attack insulin producing cells in pancreas; preventing insulin production |
super antigens: proteins that can cause very strong immune response, activate more T cells than normal -bypass normal route of antigen processing by binding TCR &MHC -results in cytokine production, systemic inflammation. |
Toxic shock syndrome Scarlet fever |
Toxic shock syndrome
|
staphylococcus aureus super antigen exotoxin |
Scarlet fever |
Streptococcus pyogenes super antigen erythrotoxin |