What is the nonspecific resistance first line of defense?
What is the nonspecific resistance second line of defense?
What is Phagocytosis?
(Phago: eat, Cyte: cell) The ingestion of microbes or particles by a cell, performed by phagocytes.
What are the two types of white blood cells?
Granulocytes
Agranulocytes
What are the three types of granulocytes? what does each deal with?
leukocyte
White blood cell
What are the three types of agranulocytes?
What do monocytes do?
perform phagocytosis - present pieces of pathogens to T cells so that the pathogens may be recognized again and killed (live long)
What are the three types of lymphocytes? What does each do?
Explain the 7 steps of phagocytosis.
What are some examples of microbial evasion of phagocytosis (6)?
What are some symptoms of inflammation?
Redness Pain Heat Swelling Vasodilation
What are some chemicals released by damaged cells and what does each do?
Histamine - vasodilation, increased permeability of blood vessels
Kinins - vasodilation, increased permeability of blood vessels
Prostaglandins - intensify histamine and kinin effect
Leukotrienes - increased permeability of blood vessels, phagocytic attachment
What does the hypothalamus normally set our body temperature at? What happens when we get a fever?
Temp normally set at 37 degrees celsius.
What is the complement system?
a biochemical cascade of the immune system that helps clear pathogens from an organism which promotes healing.
What is the complement system derived from and what do they do?
It is derived from many small plasma proteins that work together to form the primary end result of cytolysis by disrupting the target cell’s plasma membrane.
What do the actions of the complement system affect?
both innate immunity and acquired immunity.
What does activation of the complement system lead to?
cytolysis chemotaxis opsonization immune clearance inflammation the marking of pathogens for phagocytosis
What does the complement system consist of?
more than 35 soluble and cell-bound proteins, 12 of which are directly involved in the complement pathways. The proteins account for 5% of the serum globulin fraction. Most of these proteins circulate as zymogens, which are inactive until proteolytic cleavage. The complement proteins are synthesized mainly by hepatocytes; however, significant amounts are also produced by monocytes, macrophages, and eptihelial cells in the gastrointestinal and genitourinary tracts.
What is the immune system?
the body’s system of defenses against disease, composed of certain white blood cells and antibodies.
Antibody (Ab)
protein substances that react against bacteria and other harmful material.
What is the most abundant of the white blood cells?
Neturophils
What is the least abundant of the white blood cells?
Basophils
Immunity
specific antibody and lymphocyte response to an antigen