Term
Cells of adaptive immunity (2) |
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Definition
Lymphocytes: 1) B cells, 2) T cells |
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Term
Primary lymphoid organs (2) |
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Definition
1) Thymus, 2) bone marrow |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
1) Myeloid components, 2) dendritic cells, 3) NK cells, 4) B cells |
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Term
Secondary lymphoid organs (3) |
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Definition
1) Lymph nodes, 2) spleen, 3) MALT |
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Term
Sites where antigens are concentrated and immune responses initiated |
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Definition
Secondary lymphoid organs |
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Term
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Definition
Avoidance of autoimmunity |
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Term
Pre-T cell CD status: _CD4 and _CD8 and _TCR [fill in with - or +] |
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Definition
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Term
Immature T cell CD status: _CD4 and _CD8 and _TCR [fill in with - or +] |
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Definition
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Term
Cytotoxic T cell CD status: _CD4 and _CD8 and _TCR [fill in with - or +] |
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Definition
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Term
Helper T cell CD status: _CD4 and _CD8 and _TCR [fill in with - or +] |
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Definition
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Term
Once mature, T cells go where |
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Definition
Secondary lymphoid organs |
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Term
Two histological parts of the thymus |
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Definition
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Term
Thymus cortex has what kind of T cells and what density |
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Definition
High density of early T cells |
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Term
Thymus medulla has what kind of T cells and what density |
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Definition
Low density of mature T cells |
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Term
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Definition
1) Long bones, 2) pelvis, 3) ribs, 4) sternum, 5) vertebrae, 6) skull |
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Term
Is bone marrow ordered or random mix of cell types |
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Definition
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Term
Immature B cells have what immunoglobins |
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Definition
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Term
Mature B cells have what immunoglobins |
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Definition
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Term
Lymph node: primary lymphoid folicle contains mostly what cells |
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Definition
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Term
Lymph node: medullary cords contain mostly what cells |
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Definition
Macrophages & plasma cells |
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Term
Lymph node: paracortical area contains mostly what cells |
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Definition
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Term
People without spleens are more susceptible to what |
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Definition
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Term
Spleen: which has the task of filtering: red or white pulp |
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Definition
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Term
Spleen: which has the task of immunity: red or white pulp |
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Definition
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Term
Spleen: cells in red pulp |
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Definition
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Term
Spleen: cells in white pulp |
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Definition
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Term
MALT: similar structure to what |
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Definition
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Term
MALT: specialized function |
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Definition
Secrete IgA to mucosal surface |
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Term
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Definition
1) Upper airway, 2) lower airway, 3) small intestine, 4) large intestine |
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Term
Examples of MALT & vaccines (2) |
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Definition
1) Flumist & upper airway, 2) Sabin polio vaccine & GI tract |
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Term
B cells remain in follicles because |
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Definition
Follicular dendritic cells secrete CXCL13 |
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Term
B cells remain in follicles because of what receptor |
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Definition
CXCR5 [that binds with CXCL13] |
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Term
T cells remain in T cell zones because |
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Definition
Reticular cells secrete CCL19 & CCL21 |
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Term
T cells remain in T cell zones because of what receptor |
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Definition
CCR7 [that binds with CCL19 & CCL21] |
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Term
Routes of entry of lymphocytes into lymph node (2) |
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Definition
1) Blood and extravasation, 2) afferent lymphatic vessels |
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Term
Where do lymphocytes extravasate into lymph nodes & MALT |
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Definition
High endothelial cells in post-capillary venules |
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Term
Lymphocytic blood extravasation mediated by |
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Definition
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Term
X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA) |
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Definition
Cannot produce antibodies from B cells due to dysfunctional BTK gene |
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Term
Do people with XLA acquire immunity from vaccines |
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Definition
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Term
What routine treatment do XLA patients require |
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Definition
Immunoglobin transfusions |
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Term
Regions of heavy chain locus (4) |
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Definition
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Term
Regions of light chain locus (3) |
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Definition
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Term
Pre-pro-B cell CD status: _CD19 and _CD10 and _CD20 and _TdT [fill in with - or +] |
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Definition
=-CD19 and +CD10 and -CD20 and -TdT |
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Term
Pro-B cell CD status: _CD19 and _CD10 and _CD20 and _TdT [fill in with - or +] |
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Definition
=+CD19 and +CD10 and -CD20 and +TdT |
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Term
Pre-B cell CD status: _CD19 and _CD10 and _CD20 and _TdT [fill in with - or +] |
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Definition
=+CD19 and +CD10 and +CD20 and +TdT |
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Term
Immature B cell CD status: _CD19 and _CD10 and _CD20 and _TdT [fill in with - or +] |
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Definition
=+CD19 and -CD10 and +CD20 and -TdT |
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Term
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Definition
Recombination Activating Gene |
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Term
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Definition
Bind recombination signal sequences (RSS's) after making dsDNA breaks |
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Term
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Definition
Add nucleotides to RAG breaks |
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Term
RAG1/2 & TdT expressed in what cells and when |
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Definition
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Term
RAG1/2 are what kind of enzyme |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Terminal Deoxynucleotidyl Transferase |
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Term
Which enzyme adds in randomness between antibody segments |
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Definition
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Term
Order in which IgH are joined |
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Definition
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Term
Which is rearranged first: IgH or IgL |
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Definition
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Term
While IgH is rearranged, what is used for the light chain |
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Definition
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Term
Each cell has how many IgH loci |
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Definition
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Term
Each cell has how many IgL loci |
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Definition
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Term
If the first IgH rearrangement is unsuccessful, then what happens |
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Definition
IgH rearrangement of second allele |
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Term
If the second IgH rearrangment is unsuccessful, then what happens |
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Definition
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Term
Name/type/description of a B cell after IgH is rearranged |
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Definition
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Term
Name/type/description of a B cell after IgL is rearranged |
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Definition
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Term
Steps of B cell development (4) |
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Definition
1) IgH rearrangment, 2) Pre-BCR checkpoint, 3) IgL rearrangement, 4) negatie selection |
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Term
Which has a higher probability of succeeding: IgH or IgL rearrangment |
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Definition
IgL since invested already with successful IgH rearrangement |
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Term
Order of alleles in IgL rearrangement |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Re-induction of locus rearrangement in self-reactive cells |
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Term
Which cells can undergo receptor editing |
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Definition
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Term
Which loci can undergo receptor editingl |
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Definition
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Term
Strong BCR engagement without costimulation leads to |
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Definition
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Term
B-1 cells are apart of which system: innate, humoral, or adaptive |
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Definition
Humoral only, not adaptive |
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Term
B-1 cells are critical for imediate/early what |
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Definition
T-independent antibody response |
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Term
Are B-1 cells found in adults |
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Definition
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Term
Are B-2 cells able to do T-independent antibody response |
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Definition
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Term
Are B-1 cells able to do T-dependent antibody response |
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Definition
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Term
Marginal zone B cells: T-independent or T-dependent response |
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Definition
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Term
Follicular B cells: T-independent or T-dependent response |
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Definition
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Term
Which is missing in neonates: marginal zones or follicular |
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Definition
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Term
Receptors expressed by mature B cells (4) |
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Definition
1) BRC, 2) TLR, 3) cytokine, 4) chemokine |
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Term
What binds the IgM antibody to the cell membrane ("adapter protein") |
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Definition
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Term
Co-receptor complex on B cells (3) |
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Definition
1) CD19, 2) CD21, 3) CD81 |
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Term
T-independent response: repetitive structures or protein component |
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Definition
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Term
T-dependent response: repetitive structures or protein component |
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Definition
Protein component required |
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Term
Which responds early: T-independent or T-dependent |
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Definition
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Term
Which has low affinity: T-independent or T-dependent |
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Definition
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Term
Which responds later: T-independent or T-dependent |
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Definition
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Term
Which has high affinity: T-independent or T-dependent |
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Definition
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Term
Classic Type I T-independent antigen |
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Definition
Lipopolysaccharide [Gram-negative, remember?] |
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Term
Classic Type II T-independent antigen |
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Definition
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Term
What is the costimulatus for classic type I T-independent antigens |
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Definition
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Term
What is the costimulatus for classic type II T-independent antigens |
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Definition
Not the capsular polysaccharide, must be from other pathways/molecules |
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Term
Classic Type I T-independent: which kind of immunoglobin |
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Definition
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Term
Classic Type II T-independent: which kind of immunoglobin |
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Definition
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Term
Common illnesses in T-independent deficient people (3) |
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Definition
1) Otitis media, 2) pneumonia, 3) meningitis |
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Term
Polysaccharide capsule with C3b attached is what type of antigen |
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Definition
Classic type II T-independent |
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Term
Are mature dendritic cells phagocytic: yes or no |
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Definition
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Term
Are immature dendritic cells phagocytic: yes or no |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
MHC Class I, MHC Class II |
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Term
Which MHC class presents to CD4 T cells |
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Definition
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Term
Which MHC class presents to CD8 T cells |
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Definition
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Term
What is the polymer structure of MHC class II molecules |
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Definition
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Term
CD80-CD26 or CD86-CD26 signalling: which cell has CD80/CD86 |
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Definition
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Term
CD80-CD26 or CD86-CD26 signalling: which cell has CD26 |
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Definition
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Term
Effector subtypes of activated CD4 T cells (4) |
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Definition
1) Th1, 2) Th2, 3) Th17, 4) TFH [we don't have to know the types (except TFH), but this is just to remind you of them] |
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Term
Which effector subtype of activated CD4 T cells promotes T-dependent antibody responses |
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Definition
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Term
Can T-independent antigens activate the innate immunity: yes or no |
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Definition
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Term
Can T-dependent antigens activate the innate immunity: yes or no |
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Definition
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Term
Which type of T cells does T-dependent response require |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Chemicals that fit in antibodies but are not immunogenic |
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Term
How do you make haptens immunogenic |
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Definition
Attach them to immunogenic proteins |
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Term
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Definition
Linking a hapten to an immunogenic protein |
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Term
3 signals from dendritic cells to CD4+ T cells |
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Definition
1) Peptide on MHC class II to TCR on T cell, 2) CD80/86 on presenter to CD28 on T cell, 3) cytokines |
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Term
How do activated T & B cells meet each other |
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Definition
Co-expression of CCR7 and CXCR5 puts them mid-way between T cell zone & B cell zone |
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Term
When activated T & B cells meet, what CD's bind |
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Definition
CD154 on T cell and CD40 on B cell |
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Term
3 signals to B cell activation in T-dependent response |
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Definition
1) Intact antigen from dendritic cell, 2) CD154-CD40 from activated T cell, 3) cytokines |
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Term
Activated B cells do what (2) |
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Definition
1) Proliferate into plasma cells, 2) move to germinal centers [lot of things here] |
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Term
When B cells move to germinal centers, what do they do (4) |
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Definition
1) Proliferate, 2) isotype switching, 3) affinity maturation, 4) terminal differentiation |
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Term
Terminal differentiation of activated B cells (2) |
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Definition
1) Plasma cells, 2) memory B cells |
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Term
Zones within germinal centers (2) |
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Definition
1) Dark zone, 2) light zone |
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Term
What happens in the light zone of germinal centers |
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Definition
1) Selection, 2) affinity maturation |
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Term
What happens in the dark zone of germinal centers |
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Definition
1) Proliferation, 2) isotype switching, 3) somatic hypermutation |
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Term
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Definition
Changing the constant part of the IgG to another (μ, δ, γ, ε, α) |
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Term
When do B cells undergo isotype switching |
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Definition
Upon activation by Tfh cells |
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Term
Basic mechanism of isotype switching |
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Definition
Switch regions exposed → DNA loop excised → new constant region right after VDJ |
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Term
Does isotype switching involve Ig heavy chain: yes or no |
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Definition
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Term
Does isotype switching involve Ig light chain: yes or no |
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Definition
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Term
Does isotype switching alter antigen binding affinity: yes or no |
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Definition
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Term
What is required for isotype switching |
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Definition
Activated B cell with continuous signalling from Tfh cells (CD154 & cytokines) |
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Term
After isotype switching, will there be anymore be IgM antibodies for that antigen: yes or no |
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Definition
Yes, isotype switching happens after proliferation so IgM and IgM/D/G/E/A exist |
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Term
Outcomes of somatic hypermutation (3) |
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Definition
1) No affinity change, 2) loss of binding affinity, 3) gain of binding affinity |
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Term
What happens to B cells that have a loss of binding affinity after somatic hypermutation |
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Definition
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Term
What happens to B cells that have a gain of binding affinity after somatic hypermutation |
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Definition
They proliferate and become the plasma & memory cells [WINNING!] |
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Term
How is gain/loss of affinity after somatic hypermutation assessed |
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Definition
Competition for binding to limited antigen presented |
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Term
If a B cell undergoes somatic hypermutation and the Kd of the antibody becomes a smaller value, is it ___ [more or less] likely to survive |
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Definition
More likely [decrease in Kd means increase binding affinity] |
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Term
Where do plasma cells eventually go to |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
When a memory B cell encouters its antigen again |
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Term
Are memory cells isotype switched: yes or no |
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Definition
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Term
Are memory cells ___ [high or low] affinity |
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Definition
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Term
Are memory cells long lived: yes or no |
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Definition
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Term
Are memory cells: fixed location or circulating |
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Definition
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Term
What links heavy chains together |
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Definition
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Term
What is covalent modifications are done to the heavy chains |
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Definition
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Term
Name of the region in which the immunoglobin can flex |
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Definition
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Term
What secondary structure is found in the "pocket" of the immunoglobin |
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Definition
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Term
Proteolytic cleavage of an immunoglobin forms what domains (2) |
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Definition
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Term
What do Fc receptors detect |
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Definition
The constant end of immunoglobins |
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Term
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Definition
Any substance that interacts specifically with the binding site of an antibody |
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Term
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Definition
Part/region of antigen that makes contact with binding site of an antibody |
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Term
Constant region of immunoglobins dictates (3) |
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Definition
1) Multimerization, 2) tissue distribution, 3) effector function [complement, Fc receptors, ….] |
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Term
Where is IgM mostly found |
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Definition
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Term
Where is IgG mostly found |
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Definition
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Term
Where is IgE mostly found |
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Definition
Tissues bound to mast cells |
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Term
Where is IgA mostly found |
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Definition
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Term
Where is IgD mostly found |
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Definition
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Term
IgG subtypes (4; in order to most active with complement binding) |
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Definition
1) IgG4, 2) IgG2, 3) IgG1, 4) IgG3 |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Which immunoglobin is transferred across the placenta |
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Definition
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Term
Which immunoglobin is transferred through breast milk |
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Definition
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Term
Effector mechanisms of antibodies (5) |
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Definition
1) Agglutination, 2) neutralization, 3) classical complement, 4) Fc-mediated opsonophagocytosis, 5) cellular cytotoxicity |
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Term
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Definition
Antibodies link microbes/particles together |
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Term
Advantages of agglutination of bacteria (2) |
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Definition
1) Blocks colony formation, 2) aggregates bacteria together [easier to find & destroy] |
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Term
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Definition
Binding to active site of microbe/virus and prevents cellular entry |
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Term
Which immunoglobins can activate the classical complement pathway (2) |
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Definition
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Term
Immunoglobin activation of complement first attracts what |
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Definition
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Term
Immunoglobin activation of complement leads to coating by what |
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Definition
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Term
Which immunoglobins can activate Fc receptor-mediated opsonophagocytosis (4) |
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Definition
All but IgD: 1) IgM, 2) IgG, 3) IgA, 4) IgE |
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Term
Which opsonizing immunoglobin(s) can be phagocytosized by macrophages |
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Definition
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Term
Which opsonizing immunoglobin(s) can be endocytosized by dendritic cells |
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Definition
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Term
Which opsonizing immunoglobin(s) cause degranulation of mast cells |
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Definition
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Term
Which opsonizing immunoglobin(s) cause degranulation of eosinophils |
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Definition
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Term
Which cells can perform antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (2) |
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Definition
1) Eosinophils, 2) NK cells |
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Term
What protein binds immunoglobins together |
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Definition
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Term
Hinge region variability of the IgG's has what consequences (2) |
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Definition
1) Flexibility, 2) sensitivity to proteases → half-life changes |
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Term
What determines if IgA circulates in the blood or is excreted to epithelia surfaces |
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Definition
Presence of the J chain protein |
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Term
IgA chiefly functions as what effector mechanism |
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Definition
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Term
How are mast cells activated via immunoglobins |
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Definition
Antigen-bound IgE binds to IgE receptor on mast cell |
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