Immunology – Flashcards

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question

how long does it take the body to detect the first response to an infection?

 

second response?

answer

7-10 days

 

3-4 days

question

Active adaptive immunity

Natural:

Acquired:


answer

Natural: patient acquired, and recover

 

Acquired: vaccination

question

passive adaptive immunity

Natural:

Acquired:

answer

Natural:breastmilk

Acquired: patient given pre formed immune components.

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innate immune system cells
answer

recognize broad paterns of cells using molecular patern recognition receptors

coded in the DNA (so unchangeable)

 

for example NK recognize by lack of normal expression of molecules.

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adaptive immune system cells
answer

identify specific antigens.  DNA can change. 

T cells

B cells

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types of immunogens
answer

good immunogens: BIG, proteins, carbs, complex

bad immunogens: small, lipids

Doesn:t matter: charge and shape

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Immunoglobulin

(ig)

answer

part of the antibody that is reactive(γ-globulin)

1.) they can be immunogenic

question
what are the immunoglobulins in descending order of prevelance?
answer
GAMDE
question

domain

region

answer

domain: repeated primary AA regions in heavy and light chains

Region: variable part where it binds to antigens.  hypervariable region contacts epitope

question
Secondary antibody response
answer
  • quicker
  • more intense, more antibodies made
  • more prolonged
  • primary exposure most common is IGm.  secondary exposure most common is IGg, IGa or IGe.
question
T independent antigens
answer
  • usually carbs or polymers
  • directly bind to Ig antigen receptors and bridge them together
  • only IGm has a role
  • no memory response
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Titer

Antiserum

Antiglobulin

Precipiten

Agglutimin

Hemolysis

answer

Titer: inverse of highest dilution to illicit a response

Antiserum: serum that has antibodies

Antiglobulin: part of serum protein with antibody reactive against an antigen

Precipitin: an antibody that precipitates when it encounters an antigen

Agglutimin: an antigen that reacts with a cellular insoluble antigen resulting in clumping

Hemolysis: an antibody that causes lysis of a RBC

 

question

Affinity

Avidity

answer

Affinity: sum of atractive and repulsive forces between AB and AG

Avidity: strength of binding of AG to AB

question
ELISA
answer
  1. AG is incubated in plate, some stay on
  2. plate washed, some G remain
  3. excess binding sites are blocked by proteins
  4. patient diluted blood added to plate, free AB washed away
  5. secondary anti-immunoglobulin AB coupled to an enzyme is added, binds to patient AB, free AB washed away
  6. bound AB is detectedby dye
  7. light determines concentration
question
Western Blot
answer
  1. separate proteins and denature.  put on gel for elecrofloresis to determine protein size
  2. transfer proteins from gell to immobalizing nitrocellulos membrane, electrical charge done.
  3. excess proteins/AG binding sites on mitrocellulose membrane are blocked.
  4. overlay mitrocellulose membrane with patient specimin containing AB
  5. detect bound AB using elisa
question

Secondary binding test

Precipitation

answer

ouchterloney.  patient sample loaded into gel matrix in dish, AB loaded nearby.  diffusion patern determines.  can find fungus disease

radial immunodiffusion test: known AB is mixed in gel matrix, AG loaded into punched holes in gell.  diffusion occurs, rings happen.  bigger ring, more AG.  can find isotype humoral immune deficiency

Immunoelectrophoresis: serum in punched holes, elecrophoresis occurs.  good to determine gammopathies multiple myelomas.

question

secondary binding test

direct agglutination

Pasive agglutination

answer

direct agglutination: AB and AG comine, clumping happens.  good for blood typing

Pasive agglutination: known AB or AG bound to insoluble item like latex bead.  combbine with serum, see clumps.

question
Compliment
answer
  1. opsonins C3b and C4b tag things to be phagocitized
  2. recruit leukocites to an area(chemotaxis)
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C1INH
answer

C1INH: binds to C1r and C1s causing them to dissociate from C1q.  also prevents spontanious C1 activation

DAF CD55: acts to dissociate C4b2b to inhibit the clasical pathway

Factor I: cleaves C4b following dissociation of C4b2b by DAF

Factor H: compete with factor B for binding to surface boud C3b.  inhibits the alternative pathway

Vitronectin: inhibits insertion of MAC, prevents cytolysis

 

question
compliment deficiency
answer

deficient in C1,4,2,3 or I: more suseptible to infection by encapsulated bacteria, dificulty clearing immune complex.  impaired clasical pathway

deficient in C5,6,7,8: trouble handling blood born infections

Type I heredetary angiodema: low on C1 esterase inhibitor  results in spontanious edema.

Factor H deficient: lysis of RBC by alternative pathway

Properdin deficient: defect in alternative pathway, infections by encapsulated bacteria

MBL deficient: more suseptible to many bacteria.

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Basophils
answer
  • Non professional
  • kill pathogens in extracellular by releasing lysosomes
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Eosinophil
answer
  • Non-professional
  • kill extracellular
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Neutrophil
(myeloid cell)
answer
  • professional
  • major type of myeloid cell
  • rabbit
  • kill intracellularly or extracellulrly
  • chemotherapy drugs lower neutrophils.
question
Monocyte
answer
  • professional phagocyte
  • monocytes in blood, macrophage in tissue
  • tortoise
  • can perform antigen presentation to T cells.
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Phagocytosis
answer

1.) Chemotaxis: phagocytes follows chemicals from compliment to a site

2.) Adherance: at the site, opsonin helps phagocyte bind to material, by C3b and iGg.  C3b+IGg=synergize.

3.) Ingestion: phagosome surounds victim

4.) Destruction: digest/killing

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leukocytes traveling in blood vessels
answer

1.) weak binding step allows rolling adhesion

2.) tight binding that arrests rolling adhesion and allows WBC to squeeze between endothelial cells (diapedesis)

question
acute inflamation
answer
inflamation due to relaxation of vascular semmoth muscle and vasodilation
question
on sensing microbial production, macrophages ecrete
answer

IL-1β: activates vascular endothelium, lymphocytes, local tissue distruction, increase access of effector cells.  fever, production of IL-6

 

TNF-α: activate vascular endothelium, increase vascular permiability, more IGg/complement/cells into tissue.  fever, mobalize metabolites,shock

 

IL-6: activate & increase AB production.  fever, increase acute phase protein production.  regulates Albunin, fibrinogen, hemopexin, cysteine protease inhib.

 

IL-8: chemotactic factor, recruits WBC, activation

 

IL-12: activate NK cells, induce differentiation of CD4 T cells into TH1 cells

question
extravasation
answer

1.) adhesion molecules expressed on vascular endothelium

2.) pavementing and diapedesia

3.) chemotaxis of leukocytes

question
Adjuvent
answer

administered with immunogen, non specifically enhance immune response.

 

can prevent dilution/dispersion of the immunogen

 

cause mild irritation to enhance antigen processing.

 

(eg) alum.

 

 

question
Papain
answer

enzyme that breaks IGg at hinge region into 3 parts.

2 parts (FAB) can still bind

1 part binds to compliment

question
Clonal Selection Theory
answer

mutations in hypervariable region when producing clones of B cells.  specific

 

when the B cells encounters an antigen it can become a pasma cell or a memory B cell.  hapens only after mature B cell with IGm and IGd.  if before, the B cell is destroyed (tolerance)

question
IGg
answer
  • most common
  • neutralize toxins
  • opsonization
  • compliment
  • cross pacenta
  • bind 2 antigens at once
question
IGm
answer
  • Pentamer
  • J chain joins the units together
  • Monamer on B cells
  • no hinge region, but extra constant domain on heavy chain (4 domains)
  • first IG in primary response
  • important for compliment
  • neutralize toxins
  • can bind 5 antigens at once
question
IGa
answer
  • secreted as 2 piece dimer linked by J chain made by B cells.  serum as monomer
  • has secretory component produced by epithelial cells that protects IGa from denature
  • external secretion in fluids like milk, tears, saliva
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IGe
answer
  • extra constant heavy doman (4 domains)
  • responsible for alergies
  • non-aglutinating
  • defend from parasites
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IGd
answer
  • 1 less ss bond
  • not secreted by plasma cells
  • coexpressed with IGm on B cells as antigen receptor
question

Sensitivity

Specificity

answer

Sensative: find the diseased.  good for results that are negative to rule out.  many false +.  Eliza test.  god fro screaning

Specific: exclude the non diseased.  helpfull when test is posative to rule in. many false -.  western blot.  good to confirm.

question

compliment

Clasical activation pathway

answer

C1-> C4-> C2-> C3. 

 

activated by IC containing (2) IGg or (1) IGm. 

 

1.) C1 binds to AG, and gets activated to C1'

;

2.) C1' atracts, and claves a C4.  C4a goes away, C4b binds to membrane

 

3.) C1' atracts and cleaves a C2.; C2a goes away, C2b binds to C4b on surface.

now cell surface is {C4b2b} a C3 convertase

;

4.) C4b2b cleaves a C3.; C3a goes away, C3b binds.

now cell surface is {C4b2b3b} a C5 convertase

;

terminal pathway occurs

;

question

complement

alternate pathway

(properdin; pathway)

answer

functions in absense of AB.

first we need an activator:; something that hydrolyses C3

;

1.) hydrolysis of C3 happens.; C3a goes away, C3b binds to cell surface.;

;

2.) factor B comes and binds to C3b on cell surface.

now cell surface is factorB-C3b

;

3.) factor D comes and breaks factor B, so Ba goes away.

now cell surface is C3bBb

;

4.) properdin binds C3bBb

now cell surface {properdin-C3bBb} C3 convertase

;

question

Completment

Lectin pathway

answer

identicle to clasical pathway exept MBL is used instead of C1

;

so MBL, C4, C2, C3

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destruction

resperatory burst

answer

1.) cell makes NADPH oxidase

2.) O2 becomes make super-oxide anion O2- which combines with H to make H2O2 which interacts with myeloperoxidase to make hypochalide ion OCl- which kills bacteria

;

question

Destruction

Phagosome-lysosome fusion

answer

O2 independent

lysosome fuses with phagosome (phagolysosome)

question

Complement

:a background

answer
  • mark cells for destruction
  • goal is to make C3 convertase.; C3 has short life, so is rate limiting step
  • final goal is to make MAC (straw) so ions go out, water goes into cell
  • "anaphylatoxins C5a>C3a>C4a"
  • "margination C5a"
  • "chemoatractants for WBC C5a>C3a"
  • "regulation of vascular tone C2 and C2 Kinin"
question
Terminal Pathway
answer

C6, C7, C8.-; {C9} group up to make the straw

;

triggered by C5b

question

C1inhibitor

;

regulates which pathway?

;

what if someone lacks it?

answer

Regulates C1 (clasical pathway)

"dissociates C1r and C1s from C1q"

can also disrupt MBL (lectin pathway)

;

if lacking, "type 1 heredetary angiodema".; stress-; vasodilation/adema.; cant control vascular tone.; overproduction of C2a, C2a kinin

question

Decay activation factor

(DAF)

CD55

;

what does it regulate?

;

answer

breaks clasical C3 convertase

;

;

question

Factor I

;

what does it influence?

answer
cleaves C4b of clasical C3 convertase
question

Factor H

;

what pathway does it influence?

;

what happens of deficient?

answer

competes with factor B for binding to C3b

;

alternate pathway

;

deficient = lyse RBC, and endothelium

question

anaphylatoxin inactivator

serum carboxypeptidase B

answer
removes arg from C3a, C4a, C5a
question

vitronectin

S protein

answer
binds C5, C6, C7.; prevents MAC from forming
question
CD59
answer
binds C5b-8.; prevents C9 from forming (no straw)
question
deficient in C1-;C4
answer
  • suseptible to encapsulated bacteria
  • poor at clearing IC, so have AID
question

deficient in C5-;C9

;

deficient in C5-;C8

answer

C5-;C9: can't make MAC

 

C5->C8: can't kill gram -.; meningitis.

question

Properdin deficient

;

;

answer

increased infection by encapsulated, meningitis

;

alternate

question
MBL deficient
answer

suseptible to many bacteria


Lectin pathway

question

Basophil

;

Eosinophil

answer

Basophil: regulate hypersensitivity

;

Eosinophil: allergy/parasites

question
phagocytosis
answer

1.) chemotaxis: C5a, C3a, C4a.; chemokines (interleukins).; diapedesis happens

;

2.) Adherance:; binding ; opsonins.; IGg1, IGg3, C3b

;

3.) Ingestion

question
increase phagocytosis
answer
IFN; made by CD4+ Helpter T cells and NK
question
Inflamation
answer

IL1: local tissue distruction, fever, trigger IL6

;

IL6: fever, induce phase protein, FIBRINOGEN

;

IL8: NOT ACUTE PHASE RESPONSE.; chemotactic, activate WBC

;

TNF;: vaso permiability, fever/shock.

question
WBC moving in the blood
answer

1.) rolling: cell adhesion molecules "selectins"

;

2.) tight bind: ICAM-1 "integrin"

;

3.) Diapedesis: CD31

;

4.) Chemotacis

question

Th2 cells

;

answer

IL-4: induce growth and isotype switching of IGg1 and IGe

IL-5: turn B cells into plasma cells, and isotype switching ti IGa

IL-6: differentiating factor can be made by macrophages, epithelial, endothelial

IL-13: growth and differentiation of B cells, and isotype switching to IGe.; works with IL-4

;

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