Why have an immune system?
microbiome
ecosystem of bacteria in our intestinal tract
what are the good characteristics of having an immune system?
when the appropriate response is taken:
what are the bad characteristics of our immune system?
when an inappropriate response is made:
which organ system is involved in our immune system
lymphatic system
which organs are involve din our immune system?
1) thymus - in chest, gets smaller as we get older (stops growing at puberty)
2) lymph nodes - scattered throughout the body where lymph moves through and where immune cells congregate
3) spleen - which we can live without, immune cell gathering place
4) bone marrow - source of all immune cells
5) appendix? - meeting point for cells, can live without
which two tissues are involved in our immune system?
1) MALT - mucosa associated lymphoid tissue
- this is not an organ, it is a tissue within an organ, part of the mucosa
2) GALT - gut associated lymphoid tissue
- where the immune system learns what’s outside the body
which two areas are said to be “immune privileged”?
1) the brain
2) the cornea
immune privileged refers to the fact that the immune system does not reach here
pathogen
“organism” that causes disease (we consider a virus a pathogen but it is not an organism
-patho = disease, gen = to create
immunogen
something that causes an immune response
-can be a whole organism or part of an organism
antigen
antibody
molecule specific to an antigen
-molecule that we make that binds to a single antigen (to the epitope specifically)
epitope
one part of an antigen
innate immunity is the ____ line of defence
1st
innate immunity
what 2 physical barriers are included in the innate immunity?
1) physical prevention - skin
- single layer epithelial cells in gut, prevents bacteria form coming in unless damaged
2) mucous membranes - keeps bacteria out
what are the 4 physiological barriers to infection
1) temperature
- increase in temperature makes environment less hospitable for bacteria - inflammatory reactions are warm
2) pH
- low pH of stomach, pH of sweat
3) enzymes
- in our tears and in mucus of nasal cavity, we secrete lysozyme - breaks down bacteria cell walls
4) compement
- proteins in our blood, prevents bacteria from reaching blood
what are the primary functions of complement
MAC: a ring of proteins that forms a hole
-[] of solutes higher in cytoplasma than in ISF, without MAC, controls water rushing in
what are the secondary functions of complement?
what are the two ways in which complement can be “activated”?
1) having some of C1 proteins bind to foreign cell (recognize it) - this makes the pathway begin
2) can have a specific antigen on the cell surface, with an antibody which binds to pathogen and triggers the pathway (very specific)
regardless of mechanism, the end result is the same (MAC)
what does MAC stand for?
membrane attack complex, this is the end result of complement activation
what are the 4 granulocytes
1) basophils
2) mast cells
3) eosiniophils (stains blood)
4) neutrophils
which is the most common WBC?
neutrophils
what are the 5 phagocytes?
1) eosinophils
2) neutrophils
3) monocytes
4) macrophages
5) dendritic cells