Term
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Definition
Pathogen-associated molecular patterns. Most pathogens contain repeating molecular structures on their surface. This enables them to be recognized by PRRs. |
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Term
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Definition
Pattern recognition receptors. They are the receptors on some cells that can recognize some of the surface patterns displayed by pathogens |
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Term
What are Toll-like receptors (TLRs)? |
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Definition
They are signaling receptors that distinguish different types of pathogen and help direct an appropriate immune response |
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Term
What is TLR-4 and what does it do? |
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Definition
TLR-4 is a toll-like receptor that signals the presence of bacterial lipopolysaccharide. |
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Term
TLR-4 is a signal receptor located on the _____ ______ of macrophages and ______ ______. It associates with a macrophage receptor called ______, and an additional cellular protein called _______. TLR-4 signals the presence of __________ ___________________. |
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Definition
cell surface, dendritic cells, CD14, MD-2, bacterial lipopolysaccharides |
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Term
TLR's most often activate the ______ pathway. |
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Definition
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Term
_________ and _________ are a major method of cell-to-cell communication. |
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Definition
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Term
What do cytokines do? What is autocrine, paracrine, and endocrine? |
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Definition
They are small proteins secreted by many cells, but mostly immune system cells that can affect the behavior of the cell that secretes the cytokine (autocrine), the behavior of nearby cells (paracrine), or the behavior of distant cells (endocrine). |
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Term
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Definition
Secreted by immune cells (mostly) and other cells, they are small proteins that attract monocytes, neutrophils, and other effector cells from the blood to sites of infection. They also guide lymphocytes to their proper destinations. |
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Term
______ is an important cytokine that triggers local containment of infection but induces shock when released systemically. |
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Definition
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Term
TNFa induces _________ of arterioles, and increases _____ ______ in downstream capillaries. |
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Definition
vasodilation, clot formation |
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Term
Too much TNFa in the bloodstream - its release caused by a systemic infection (sepsis) - can result in ______. |
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Definition
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Term
What are the endogenous pyrogens? |
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Definition
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Term
What do the endogenous pyrogens do? |
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Definition
Induce systemic effects that result in fever, or act like endocrine hormones. |
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Term
What is the acute phase response? |
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Definition
It involves a shift in the proteins synthesized and secreted by the liver into the plasma. Levels of some plasma proteins go down, while levels of others increase markedly. |
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Term
The acute phase response results from the action of ______, ______, and ________. |
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Definition
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Term
The acute phase response promotes the synthesis of specific proteins called _____ _____ ______. |
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Definition
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Term
Acute phase proteins act alot like Ig, but are ______ secreted and are _____ ______ in what they bind. |
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Definition
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Term
Acute phase proteins can act as _______ and can activate the _______ _______. |
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Definition
opsonins, complement cascade |
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Term
The acute phase protein of note that's produced in the liver is ________ _______. |
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Definition
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Term
The C-reactive protein can __________ bacterium, and can also activate the ________ ________. |
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Definition
opsonize, complement cascade |
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Term
Interleukins IL-1, IL-6, and TNFa in the hypothalamus cause ________ ______ _______. |
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Definition
increased body temperature (fever) |
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Term
Increased body temperature (fever) in the hypothalamus, has what 3 positive affects? |
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Definition
- Decreased viral and bacterial replication
- Increased antigen processing
- Increased specific immune response
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Term
What are interferons, and what 3 types are there? |
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Definition
Known also as antiviral effector molecules, interferons are proteins produced as a response to their host cells undergoing viral infection. They have been found to interfere with viral replication and block the spread of viruses to other cells. The 3 different types are IFNa, IFNb, and IFNy |
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Term
Which type of proteins can increase the activity of NK cells 20-100 fold? |
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Definition
interferons - IFNa, IFNb. NK activity also increased by interleukin cytokine IL-12. |
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Term
What are NK cells and what do they do? |
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Definition
NK = Natural Killer cells. They develop in the bone marrow from the common lymphoid progenitor and act in a similar manner to cytotoxic T cells (CTL) by causing apoptosis in certain lymphoid tumor cells via injection of cytotoxic granules that induce DNA degredation. |
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Term
NK cells' role in defense is in the _______ phases of infection and with several _________ pathogens. |
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Definition
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Term
Why do some viruses decrease MHC I expression? |
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Definition
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Term
What types of proteins can increase MHC I expression? |
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Definition
interferons - IFNa, and IFNb |
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Term
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Definition
leaving the blood to enter cell tissues |
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Term
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Definition
cell adhesion molecules - |
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Term
What are the 3 types of CAMs? |
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Definition
- Selectin
- Integrin
- intercellular adhesion molecules (ICAMs)
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Term
________, expressed by _______ cells, allow for initial binding of leukocytes. |
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Definition
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Term
_______, expressed by ________, promote strong binding between leukocytes, diapedesis, and endothelial cells. |
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Definition
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Term
Which type of CAM binds to integrins and where is it expressed? |
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Definition
intercellular adhesion molecules (ICAMs), endothelium |
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Term
The Complement Cascade is a set of plasma proteins that ________ ______, ______ ________, and directly kill ________ _______. |
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Definition
opsonize pathogens, promote inflammation, infectious organisms |
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Term
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Definition
A protein that is part of the complement cascade, zymogens are proteases that are created in an inactive state and activated by cleavage of another protease. |
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Term
Why are zymogans key players in amplifying the complement cascade? |
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Definition
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Term
All three pathways leading to complement activation converge at the _____ ____ ______. |
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Definition
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Term
What is C3b and how is it made? What other peptide can be made from it? |
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Definition
C3b is made via cleavage from C3. It acts as a tag, covalently bonding to pathogens and preparing them for opsonization. It can also bind to C3 convertase to make C5 convertase. |
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