What is the innate immune system?
It is the non-adaptive immune system to defend the host against pathogens. It exists in the germ line and does not undergo any genetic rearrangements.
What are the main cells of the innate immune system?
Phagocytes
What are the two major types of phagocytes found in the innate immune system?
Macrophages
Neutrophils
What are some of the characteristics of macrophages?
What are some of the characteristics of neutrophils?
What does it mean if neutrophils are seen in high amounts in tissues?
There is likely some sort of problem present in the tissue
What is opsonization?
Opsonization is the coating of particles by molecules that enhance recognition by phagocytes.
Adaptive immunity can opsonize pathogens with antibodies. The innate immune system can opsonize pathogens with proteins of the complement system.
What is the function of cytokines and what innate cells produce them?
Macrophages make them to act on cells to program them for microbial combat
What is the function of chemokines and what innate cells produce them?
Macrophages make them with chemoattractant properties to recruit leukocytes to sites of infection
What is the function of lipid mediators?
They have a similar function to cytokines in reprogramming cells
What are cell surface PRRs?
PAMP recognition receptors
Where are PRRs highly expressed?
Macrophages and dendritic cells
What is the function of TOLL like receptors?
Transmembrane and sense extracellular
infection like bacteria
What is the function of C-type lectin receptors?
Transmembrane and sense sugars for fungal infections
What is the function of Rig-I like receptors?
Cytosolic and recognize viral RNA
What is the function of NOD like receptors?
Cytosolic and recognize bacteria and viruses that enter the cell
What is inflammation?
Inflammation is a general term for the accumulation of fluid, plasma proteins and white blood cells that occurs in tissue subjected to injury, infectious agents, or immune responses.
What are the effects and purposes for inflammation?
Inflammation is fundamentally protective and is intended to destroy or wall off the offending agent.
It is interwoven with tissue repair but can be destructive if it goes on too long.
What are the 3 key events in inflammation?
What is alteration of blood flow in inflammation?
Vasodilation will occur and increased blood flow to the tissue will result (calor, rubor, dolor)
What is the increased vascular permeability in inflammation?
Endothelial cells contract and allow for the leakage of more serum into the tissue space (tumor)
What is the infiltration of WBCs in inflammation?
Neutrophils move in early on then macrophages and lymphocytes come to the site last.
What activates the innate immune system and how fast is this response?
It occurs within minutes and is activated by Pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) on DC or macrophages.
What are the various types of PRRs?
TLR
CLR
NLR
RLR