Term
Define : Nonspecific Defense |
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Definition
They do not distinguish one infectious agent from another |
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Term
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Definition
A specific defensive protein |
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Term
What is the immune system? |
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Definition
Comes to play simultaneosly with the 2nd line of defense, but are specific defense mechanisms |
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Term
Name the three aspect of the 1st line of defense. |
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Definition
Skin, mucous membranes, and secretions of skin and mucuous membranes |
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Term
Name a chemical defense on the surface of the skin |
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Definition
Sebaceous glands and sweat glands give the skin a pH of 3 to 5. Or microbial colonization. |
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Term
What does the 2ndary response consist of? |
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Definition
Phagocytic White Blood Cells, antimicrobial proteins, and the Infammatory response. |
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Term
What causes the inflammation in the inflammatory response? |
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Definition
Precapillary arteries dilate, postcapillary venules constrict, local blood supply increases, redness and heat occurs, blood engorged capillaries leak fluid into tissues, edema swelling occurs |
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Term
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Definition
Chemical signal released by cells from tissue injury, triggers dilation and pemeability of nearby capilaries |
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Term
Two leukocytes that produce Histamine: |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
substance that further promotes to site, produced by leukocytes and damaged tissue cells |
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Term
What is the main point of inflammation |
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Definition
Phagocytosis - increased local blood flow and capillary permeability enhance phagocytic cell migration to area |
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Term
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Definition
molecules secreted by blood vessel endothelial cells and monocytes, attracts phagocytes, 50 different proteins, binds to receptors of leukocytes and cause certain reactions in th inflamatory response |
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Term
What is the given Example of how chemokines enhance the inflammatory response? |
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Definition
They induce the production of toxic forms of oxygen in Phagocye lysosomes and the release of histamine from basophils |
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Term
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Definition
Dead phagocytic cells, fluid and proteins that leaked from capillaries during inflammatory response, absorbed by body in few days |
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Term
Name the two systemic responses to severe tissue damage/infection. |
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Definition
1. Injured cells all for reinforcement! Emits chemicals, neutrophils from bone marrow, sometimes 7fold within hrs of initial inflammatory response 2. Fevers - leukocytes release pyrogens, inhibits growth of microorganisms, facilitates phagocytosis, speed up body reactions, speed tissue repair |
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Term
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Definition
overwhelming inflammatoy response, low blood pressure and fever, deadly |
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Term
Define : The Complement System |
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Definition
20 serum antimicrobial proteins, carry out lysis of microbes. Ex) lysozomes in tears, saliva and mucuous secretions, Essential to all specificities of defenses |
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Term
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Definition
Proteins secreted by cell under attack of virus that diffuse into neighboring cells to produce chem that inhibits viral reproducton. Also nonspecific and activates phagocytes, enhancing ability to ingest and kill microorganisms, clinically produced by recombinant DNA technolog for cancer and viruses |
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Term
Where do leukocytes develop? |
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Definition
The Thymus and Bone Marrow |
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Term
Where on the lymphtic system are foreign molecules trapped? 6 places |
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Definition
Adenoid, Tonsil, Lymph Nodes, Spleen, Peyer's Patch, Appendix |
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Term
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Definition
viruses, bacteria, fungi, protozoa, parasitic worms, pollen, transplanted tissue... |
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Term
antibod generators induce... |
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Definition
B cells to secrete proteins called antibodies, only slightly different from each other |
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Term
Define : T Cell receptors |
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Definition
structurally different than membrane antibodies, but recognize antigens just as specifically,not detached |
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Term
A single T or B lymphocyte bears about ______ receptors for antigens, all with ______ specificity |
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Definition
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Term
How are particular structures of a lymphocyte determined? |
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Definition
Genetic developments early in development, As an unspecialized cell differentiates into a B or T lymphocyte, segments of antibody genes or receptor genes are linked by genetic recombination, generating a single functional gene for each polypeptide of an antibody or receptor protein. |
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Term
Define : Clonal Selection |
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Definition
Antigen selects lymphocyte and activates it to form 2 clones: 1. Effector Cells (shortlived) 2. Memory Cells (longlived). Antigen driven cloning. |
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Term
What is the signifcance of clonal selecton? |
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Definition
NOTE: Each antigen, by binding to specific receptors, selectively activates a tiny fraction of cells from the body's diverse pool of lymphocytes; this small number of selected cells give rise to clones of thousands cells specific for eliminating that antigen. |
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Term
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Definition
Effector B-Cells (secretes antibodies) generated by B and T cells respectively |
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Term
How to tell where B and T cells developed in lymphaticsystem?? |
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Definition
B Cel: B for Bone Marrow grown T Cell: T for Thymus |
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Term
What happens to lymphocytes that bear receptors for molecules inside the body? |
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Definition
Rendered as nonfunctional or destroyed by apoptosis (programmed cell death) |
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Term
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Definition
Major Histocompatibility Complex are families of genes that encode the collecton of cell surface glycoproteins. Polymorphic biochemical fingerprint |
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Term
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Definition
Almost all nucleated cells, presents antigen fragment from infected cell to cytotoxic T-cell |
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Term
What happens in antigen presentation? |
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Definition
T cells are then alerted to an infectious agent after it has been internalized by the cell by phagocytosis or receptor mediated response |
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Term
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Definition
Few types such as B cells, macrophages, activated T-Cells, Macrophhages present using this to Helper T cells |
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Term
What is a function of polymorphism? |
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Definition
To survive a mass epidemic: individual collections of MHCs vary from person to person |
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Term
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Definition
Antigen Presenting Cells. Anything that ingest bacteria, collect peptide remnants and present them to helper T cells |
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Term
4 main characteristics of immune system shown by B&T Lymphocytes: |
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Definition
Specificity, Diversity, Memory, Capacity to distinguish self from non-self |
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Term
Define : Humoral Response |
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Definition
involves B cell activation by circulating anitbodies to give rise to memory B or plasma cells to secrete more antibodies, antibodies -> small stuff |
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Term
Define : Cell-mediated Response |
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Definition
antigens are displayed by infected cells to activate cytotoxic T cells -> active cytotoxic T cells, binds and lyses the big stuff |
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Term
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Definition
enhances APC -> helper T cell interaction, keeps them joined |
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Term
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Definition
Proteins or peptides that stimulate other lymphocytes |
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Term
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Definition
a cytokine that helps B-cells that have contacted antigens to differentiate into antibody secreting Plasma cells |
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Term
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Definition
Cytokine that is secreted by a macrophage to activate the Tcell to produce Interleukin-1 |
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Term
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Definition
Greatly enhances antigenpresentig infected cell --> cytotoxic T cell |
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Term
Define : Cytotoxic T-cell |
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Definition
activated by class 1 MHC,stimulated by IL-2 from helper Tcell, differentiates into active killer by releasing perforin, moves on, helps rid of tumors, or else tumors face Natural Killer cells |
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Term
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Definition
Protein that forms pores in target cell membrane |
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Term
Define : T-depedent antigens |
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Definition
Antigens that evokes Bcell differentiation only with help of Helper T cells (most protein antigens are this way) |
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Term
Define : T-independant antigens |
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Definition
the repeated subunits of these antgens bind to membrane antibodies on Bcell surface, providing stimulus for the B cell to generate without help of IL - 2, important but weaker than dependant, and no memory cells are generated this way |
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Term
Why do Immunologists believe that macrophages are the main APCs in primary response? |
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Definition
Macrophages can engulf and present peptide fragments from a wide variety of antigens while a B cell internalizes only the antigen it specifically binds to |
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Term
What will happen in any given humoral response? |
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Definition
B-cells are stimulated to clone thousands of plasma cells,which secrete about 2,000 antibodies per second over the cell's 4- day life span |
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