Immunology Exam #1

Immuno Exam #1

35 cards   |   Total Attempts: 182
  

Cards In This Set

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What are the 3 characteristics that define an adaptive immune response? (Define Each)

Hint: Secondary Immune Response; lock key; N-terminal region of Abs
Memory is characterized by a more rapid and heightened immune reaction that serves to eliminate thepathogen and prevent disease. Memory B-cells live and respond quickly to Ag encounter.

Diversity: Each antibody is identical w/ regard to the N-terminal regions that are used for epitope interaction; All Abs secreted from a given B cell will be identical in the same regard

Specificity:Abs and Tcrs are very specific for particular epitopes--they each lock/key interact w/ antigen (via non-covalent bonds); even though Abs and Tcrs are highly specific there can be cross reactivity--- Abs and Tcrs can engage other antigens if there is enough structural similarity (case by case)
Define Primary vs. Secondary Immune Response
The primary response has a lag of approximately 5–7 days before antibody levels start to rise. This lag is the time required for activation of naive B cells by antigen and TH cells and for the subsequent proliferation and differentiation of the activated B cells into plasma cells. Antibody levels peak in the primary response at about day 14 and then begin to drop off as the plasma cells begin to die. In the secondary response, the lag is much shorter (only 1–2 days), antibody levels are much higher, and they are sustained for much longer. Because of these memory B cells, the secondary immune response is swifter and stronger----this powerful secondary immune response is what gives “immunity” to some diseases after you have had them once or after you have been vaccinated.
What is clonal Selection?
In the process of clonal selection, an antigen binds to a particular T or B cell and sitmulates it to divide repeatedly into a clone of cells with the same antigenic specificty as the original parent cell
Generally, what is the difference between adaptive versus innate immunity?
Does not come into play until there is an _____ challenge to the organism. ----_____ eliminates specific foreign microorganisms and molecules. ----Responses are not the same in all members of a species but are reactions to _____ antigenic challenges. ---- List the 3 Characteristics of Adaptive Immunity ----Takes approx 3-7 days to get adaptive I.R initiated and active Innate: ----Provides the first line of defense against infection. Most components of innate immunity are present ____ the onset of infection and constitute a set of disease-resistance mechanisms that are not _____ to a particular pathogen; ----In general, most of the microorganisms encountered by a healthy individual are readily cleared within a few days by defense mechanisms of the innate immune system before they activate the adaptive immune system. Defenses: skin, ____, phagocytic cells and ____ recognition receptors.


Answers: antigenic Selectively specific Memory, Specificity and Diversity before specific mucous pattern
Jenner and Jesty observed that Milkmaids who contracted cowpox never contracted small pox--- Jenner then used cowpox to inject into boy; once recovered, Jenner then injected boy with small pox to prove cowpox could protect against small pox: How did inoculation with cowpox generate immunological memory that provided protection against smallpox?
Cowpox and small pox share epitopes (structurally the same or very similar); Primary I.R arose after inoculation with cowpox and exposure to small pox led to secondary I.R due to shared epitopes, Secondary I.R afforded protection against disease onset
What is hematopoiesis? Where does it take place?

Hint: Start with a heatopoietic stem cell.
The formation and development of ____ and _____ from a Hematopoietic stem cell; it begins in the embryonic ____ sac during the first weeks of development then migrates to the fetal liver and finally to the spleen.

RBCs; WBCs; yolk
What cell types are derived from myeloid versus lymphoid progenitor cells? Name the function of each.

Hint: Lymphoid cells are WBCs (3) and include one more type of cell that is derived from both a lymphoid progenitor and myeloid preogenitor; Myeloid are both RBCs and WBCs
Common lymphoid progenitor cells give rise to 1.) ____ 2.)____ 3.) and some ____ cells. Myeloid stem cells generate progenitors of red blood cells (______), many of the various white blood cells (neutrophils, _____, basophils, monocytes, ____ cells, dendritic cells), and platelets.

Answers: B, T and Natural Killer; dendritic erythrocytes; eosinophils; mast

Describe the function of B-cells, T-cells, NK cells & Dendritic cells.

Which WBC is highly phagocytic and is the first to arrive at the site of infection? Which WBC contains histamine? Which WBC contains anti-parasitic toxins?
--B-Cell Function: differentiate into ____ (effector) cells---antibody factories---and ____ cells in the immune response.

--T cells are responsible for ____ mediated immunity; with the help of their Tcrs they engage _____ antigens ex: pathogens inside a cell such as viruses.

---Natural Killer Cells are functionally related to Tcells but they are ____ acting cells (no memory associated with these cells); rely on conserved receptors to recognize conserved molecular patterns. NK cells have preformed granules with packed perforins (FUNCTION---to form ____) and granzymes (FUNCTION: to induce ____ within virus-infected cells) ready to go.

Neutrophils
Basophils
Eosinohils
What are the primary lymphoid organs? What is their function? What are the secondary lymphoid organs? What is their role?

What are HEVs? Define extravasation. When sick, more WBCs are recruited to Nodes via extravasation; What occurs as a result?
Why is extravasation so important?
The primary lymphoid organs (bone marrow and thymus) provide appropriate ______ for the development and maturation of lymphocytes. The secondary lymphoid organs trap _____ from defined tissues or vascular spaces and are sites where mature lymphocytes can ____ effectively with that antigen. Blood vessels and lymphatic systems connect these organs, uniting them into a functional whole.

Answers: microenvironments ; antigen; interact

Cap beds; the movement of WBCs from blood capillary bed into tissue space or into an organ such as a node; Swelling; Extravasation allows for cells such as leukocytes to reach the site of tissue damage or infection.

When a foreign antigen gains entrance into the tissues, what is it picked up by? What does the lymphatic syestem drain? Where does the lymphatic system carry the antigen? What happens to the foreign antigen once it enters the secondary lymphoid organ (node)? What role does the lymphatic circulatory sytem play in immune defense.

Hinte: It carries antigen and Abs for what purpose?
The lymphatic system

Tissues

Lymph nodes

Becomes trapped

Transports lymphocytes and antigens from connective tussues to organized lymphoid tissueswhere they lymphocytes may interact with the trapped antigen and undergo activation.
What type of proteins does complement consist of? What 3 things do these proteins activate?

What are the 3 pathways to activate the complement cascade?


The binding of C3b on microbe surfaces (LPS, endotoxin or cell wall components) activates which pathway?The classical pathway becomes activated when it binds to what? The Lectin pathway is activated following the interaction what serum protein wi/ mannose carbohydrate on a microbe surface?
A group of serum proteins; Inflammation, cell lysis (destruction of cells) and opsonization

Classical pathway, Alternative pathway and lectin pathway;

Alternative pathway; Ag-Ab complex;MBL
What is MAC (Membrane Attack Attack Complex)? Hint: relation to complement. Which by-products of the C' cascade interact to form MAC?

Which C' by-products (3) act as chemoattractants for WBCs? What do C3b and C4b promote? C3a, C4a and C5a interact to induce what immune response?
A culmination of the C' cascade; C5b & C6-C9

C3a, C5a, & C5b67

inflammatory response
What type of patterns do Pattern Recognition Receptors recognize? What are these paterns called?

Which PRR is expressed on the Cell Membrane? MBLs, SAPs & CRPs belong to what family of PRRs? Protein Kinase R can bind to double stranded RNA, what type of PRR is it?

Conserved molecular Patterns

Pathogen Associated Molecular Patterns

TLRs
secreted
intracellular
List the 3 cytokines. What I.R do cytokines promote? Which cytokine activates lymphocytes and promotes fever? IL-6 and TNF-alpha promote fever by affecting what? What type of immunity do IL-6and TNF-alpha prmote? The 3 cytokines promote the expression of the secreted PRRs, name them. The also increase which type of permeability? What does the fever response do to pathogen viability, WBC mobilization and AG processing?
IL-1, IL-6 & TNF-alpha; Inflammatory response;
IL-1; thermoregulatory center in the hypothalamus; Innate immunity; MBL, SAP & CRP; vascular; decreases, increases and increases
Chemokines are small MW cytokines; List the 3 chemokines.What does MIP stand for? What does it promote the expression of?

What does IL-8 activate? Integrins are needed to promote what? This follows the engagement of integrin with what?
IL-8, MIP-alpha and MIP--beta;

Macrophage Inflammatory Protein;

IL-1, IL-6 and TNF-alpha;

integrin
extravasation
ICAMs