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Immunology Flashcards

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5696000295CD Antigen Markers0
5696000296CD4T Helper1
5696005614CD8cytotoxic T Cell2
5696005615CD3ALL t cells3
5696010574CD14macrophages4
5696010575CD16NK cells5
5696014802CD56NK Cells6
5696014803CD19, 20, 21All B cells7
5696019305CD34stem cells8
5696025343Lymphoid CellsB cells T cells NK cells9
5696025344Mononuclear CellsMacrophages Neutrophils, Eosinophils, Basophils, Mast Cells (all granulocytes) Dendritic cells10
5696053293Normal Adult Blood Cell Counts11
5696066362When do B and T cells enlarge?once exopsed to antigen!! progress from G0-G1, S, G2, M - eventually differentiate into memory and effector cells12
5696092069All clonal progeny from a given B cell secrete Ab molecules with the -same or different?? binding specificity?the same specificity!!13
5696096509What do B cells develop into ?plasma and memory cells14
5696104857Where does T cell selection occur?in the thymus!!15
5696110366What does a TCR recognize?ONLY recognizes Antigen in association with MHC16
5696123908Which MHC is exogenous? endogenous?MHC 1 = endogenous MHC II = exogenous17
5696141414What do T helper cells do?Activated TH cells divide and give rise to clones of effector cells which secrete various cytokines and play a major role in B cell, and TC cell activation and the inflammatory response18
5696151442Job of TH1activates cytotoxic T cells (CD8) macrophages drives isotype switching to IgG19
5696158860Job of TH2activates B cells drives isotype switching to IgE20
5696164153Job of TH17inflammation - extracellular bacterial and fungal infections21
5696179393What do cytotoxic T cells target?virus infected and intracellular bacteria22
5696187906Chediak-Higashi DiseaseNo NK cells increased incidence in lymphomas23
5696191946What do NK cells act on?cytotoxic actiivty against tumors24
5696198100What is the difference between monocytes and macrophages?monocytes = blood macrophages = tissue25
5696211841Image of Monocyte (be able to identify)26
5696225376Histiocytesmacrophages in Connective tissue27
5696225377Kupfer cellsmacrophages in liver28
5696229533Mesangial Cellsmacrophages in kidney29
5696229534Microglial cellsmacrophages in brain30
5696241106What do activated macrophages have?- increased phagocytic activity - increased ability to activate TH cells - higher levels of Class II MHC on cell surface31
5696249832Function of MacrophagesPhagocytosis32
5696261607What type of cells are always the first responders to infection?neutrophils (multilobed)33
5696274425Eosinophilsimportant against parasites - bilobed nucleus and granules can be seen34
5696301718Basophilsallergies - have granules - lobed nucleus (soccer ball appearance)35
5696313072What is the function of dendritic cells?*Named because of long processes resembling dendrites of nerve cells *Constituitively express high levels of class II MHC and B7, thus, better APC's than MØ and B cells *After capturing Ag in the tissues, migrate into blood or lymph and circulate to various lymphoid organs where they present Ag to T cells36
5696338581Tissue Dendritic Cells37
5696765981What is the best innate tissue type?skin38
5696777539Macrophages: M1 vs M22 major functions: *M1 classical macrophages induced by innate immunity paly a role in inflammation *M2 alternative macrophages induced by IL-4 and IL-13 and play a role in tissue repair and control of inflammation39
5696783999Macrophages vs. NeutrophilsBoth provide phagocytic response!! neutrophils = rapid and short lived macrophages: prolonged defense40
5696800006Where are dendritic cells found?all tissues (both antigen processing and presenting)41
56968053232 Major functions of dendritic cells1. initiate inflammatory response 2. initiate adaptive immune response42
5696819708Steps in Phagocytosis- bacteria engulfed by phagosome - phagosome fuses with lysosome - digestion and exocytosis43
5696858604Types of Phagocyte Receptors- Pattern Recognition REceptors (PRR) which recognize Pathogen Associated Molecular Patterns (PAMPs) or Damage Associated Molecular Patterns (DAMPS) Toll receptors CD14, TLR-4 (LPS receptor) NOD receptors RIG receptors CR3, CR4 complement receptors44
5696885387Toll Like receptors are mostly for what?Bacteria!!45
5696907832What is the phagocyte receptor for IgG and C3b (opsonization molecules)CD1646
5696912473Opsonizationa way to mark pathogens for digestion!! - enhance phagocytosis up to 4,000 fold IgG and C3b47
5696934324What happens when deficient in oxygen dependent killing?immunodeficiency!! bad news bears! (deficient in oxygen independent killing - hardly notice it)48
5696954990What is required for oxygen depending killing?NADPH oxidase which generates toxic oxygen radicals49
5696959946What happens with NADPH oxidase deficiency?chronic granulomatous disease - get many catalase + infections because these bacteria create their own ROS neutralizers so they cant be killed50
5696983204What do inflammasomes do?Signalling system for detection of pathogens and stressors Involves the assembly of a sensor (NLRP-3) and adaptor and the inactive caspase into the inflammasome. The inflammasome activates the caspase which in turn results in the expression of IL-1 The inflammasome results in the production of both IL-1 and IL-18 which are potent inflammatory cytokines51
5697002064mutations in inflammasomes will lead to what diseasegout athreosclerosis Type II diabetes52
5697018477Steps of Phagocyte Extravasation53
5697025951Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiency- absence of CD18 - leukocytes cant migrate from blood into tissues! - recurrent bacterial infections w/o pus formation - leukocytes get recruited but cant get into the vascular endothelium54
5697046823Which molecules induce fever are considered to be pro-inflammatory cytokines?IL-1, TNF-alpha, IL-655
5697093156What do Type I interferons do?- alpha and beta shut down protein synthesis - inhibit viral replication!! IFN-alpha produced by leukocytes IFN-beta produced by fibroblasts - degrade mRNA and inhibit protein synthesis - produced by viral infected cell to protect the neigbors via IFN receptors56
56971246553 Main Functions of Interferons57
5697132550CD Markers for NK CellsCD16 and CD5658
5697136836What are NK cells used for?killing viral infected and transformed cells - non specific - activation leads to degranulation of perforin - apoptosis: induces target to commit suicide - only called upon when cytotoxic T cells cant get the job done59
5697205268What type of cells do NK cells commonly kill?cells with decreased MHC Class I expression60
56972052692 Type of NK Cell ReceptorsKIR and KAR61
5697216642How do phagocytes and NK cells work together?62
5697241574When does adaptive immunity show up?- physicial barriers failed - innate immunity unable to clear infection - second encounter with antigen63
5697276838Clonal selection64
5697301553T cells are ALWAYS anchored into transmembrane region (B cells are sometimes anchored)65
5697317934Binding of Antigen Epitopes to T Cell REceptor66
5697325317How do antibodies bind?to epitopes found on surface of antigens67
5697335527What type of antigens do antibodies recognize?- proteins, lipids, carbs, nucleic acids, chemical groups, macromolecules68
5697339298What type of antigens do T cells recognize?ONLY peptides!!69
5697348461What do antibodies target?extracellular microbes, toxins - neutralizes and targets them for elimination!!70
5697358350What is the first antibody to show up?IgM71
5697366518Primary vs Secondary Antibody Responses (differnce in antibody secretion)- with primary antibody response (first time seeing antigen)...IgM secreted and IgG spike comes a while after - with secondary antibody response...body has seen this before so IgG spike comes much sooner!! this is the purpose of vaccinations!! (cause a strong memory response!)72
5697403144Explain what is happening: A 1 month old infant is exposed to pertussis (whooping cough) but does not become infected- vaccine was given to mother which is given to the infant (IgG from the mom!)73
5697417330Explain what is happening: A 5 year old child develops cellulitis. A gram stain reveals numerous PMNs (neutrophils) and gram positive bacteriaInnate Response (neutrophils)74
5697431449Humoral ImmunityAntibody immunity75
5697431450Cell-Mediated Immunity- differs from humoral immunity!! - membrane receptors only! - aimed at intracelluar pathogens! (t cells) - recognizes peptides displayed by MHC molecules on APC76
5697451872Where are MHC II's found?Antigen Presenting Cells77
5697451873Where are MHC I's found?all nucleated cells in body!! dendritic, macrophages, B cells78
5697468692Antigen Presenting Cellsdendritic, macrophages, B cells79
5697477509T Helper Cell Functions- secrete various cytokines! - play a major role in B cell and Tc Cell activation80
5697481281Th1 activates what?Tc and Macrophages81
5697481282Th2 activates what?B cells82
5697494514When you see a lab report with increase in neutrophils, what do you think??bacterial infection!!83
5697505890Okay...quiz time!! Name that immunity! natural passive natural active artificial passive artificial active84
5697524148passive immunity85
5697529856artificial passive86
5696292956Basophils87
5697545641natural active88
5697561200What is the complement?number of blood proteins produced by the liver, spleen, and macrophages - can be cleaved into fragments, B is usually larger fragment89
56975746543 Complement Pathwaysclassical alternative lectin90
5697578167What happens when all 3 complement pathways are activated?- induce inflammation - lyse certain infectious agents - opsonize infectious agents - clear immune complexes91
5697590866What activates the Lectin Complement?Manna binding to lectin (binds to CHO on bacteria)92
5697594550What activates the Classical pathway?IgM and IgG - only one IgM needed and two IgG's needed since IgM is a pentamer antibody/antigen immune complexes93
5697600172What activates the alternate pathway?spontaneous lysis of C3, if binds to bacteria, initatiate pathway94
5697625085What happens when all three pathways converge at C3?make a MAC (membrane attack complex)95
5697628491What do the b fragments do?become enzymes!!96
5697628492What do the a fragments do?anaphylatoxins97
5697635405What molecules are opsonins?IgG and C3b98
5697640834What do immune complexes trigger?inflammation and hypersensitivity reactions99
5697678017What do high levels of C3b do to immune complexes?disrupt them!! make them soluble - can take them to liver and spleen to be removed by attaching C3b to them100
5697678018What are the two important jobs of C3b?opsonization and elimination of immune complexes101
5697678019What do C3a and C5a do?act as anaphylatoxins!! - can cause degranulation of mast cells and basophils without IgE102
5697766318What is the main complement protein for inflammation?C5a - helps recruit cells to area of inflammation - also helps to degranulate mast cells which release histamine and promote inflammation and vasodilation * increase vascular permeability and stimulates phagocytosis!!103
5697789494MAC complex is critical against what bacteria?neisseria104
5697792355Recurrent Neisseria infections will point to what deficiency?MAC Pore Forming Molecules C5-C9105
5697807716What proteins are most important for inhibiting/regulating the complement?C1 inhibitor Decay inhibiting factor (DAF) CD59106
5697827063What happens with C1-INH deficiency (deficiency in complement regulatory proteins)hereditary angioedema - cant turn off complement!! get massive edema (part of inflammatory response)107
5697833960Which complement deficiency is most severe?C3 because it includes convergence of all 3 pathways!!108
5697851255How do NK cells determie what to kill?look for MHC class I cells, if it finds a cell that is not expressing MHC class I, it kills it!109
5697891208What links the heavy and light chains together?disulfide bonds110
5697891209HOw many domains do light chains have?2!! 1 V and 1 C111
5697891210How many domains do heavy chains have?4-5 domains! 1 V and 3-4 C112
5697891211What does the constant region of an antibody determine?the isotype!! IgG, IgA, IgM etc (this determiens the function)113
5697891212What does the variable region of an antibody determine?the specificity!!114
5697891213What segments compose variable region of the heavy chain? of the light chain?V, D, and J = heavy chain V and J = light chain115
5697898140What are the 5 heavy chain and 2 light chain classes5 heavy chain classes (μ,δ,γ,α, and ε) 2 light chain classes (κ and λ)116
5697906364What enzyme is required for heavy chain rearrangement?recombinase made up of Rag-1 and Rag-2117
5697911079Rag1 and Rag2 deficiency?no recombinase! cant make B cells or T cells results in SCID118
5697921303When does somatic hypermutation occur?after contact with antigen!!119
5697926583What does TDT do? terminal deoxynucleotidal transferasemesses with DNA polymerase and changes nucleotide sequence (changes specificity of response)120
5697932407When is TDT active!!only during early development121
5697941128Allelic Exclusion- B cells are diploid - but...a B cell will only express the rearranged H chain genes from 1 chromosome and L chain from 1 chromosome - this insures that every b and t cell is specific for one antigen - if using moms, exclude dads122
5697960047Predominant Antibody made during primary immune responseIgM *first antibody made in neonates - pentameric in serum - high number of binding sites (avidity) low affinity (strenght of holding) - seen on cell membrnae as monomer123
5697970437IgDbound to B cells membrane! - antigen receptor on B cells - low levels in plasma - dont fully know function124
5697981293Coexpression of IgM and IgD on same cellMature B cells have both IgM and IgD - have different constant regions (isotypes) but same variable region!! so bind the same antigens125
5697988662How does class switching occur for IgG?via Th1 cells and IFN-gamma126
5697994170What is the predominant antibody in serum?IgG127
5697997318When does IgG predominate? Why?during secondary immune response!!! IgG spike!! - this is because its a high affinity antibody!!128
5698001451Functions of IgG- opsonization - cytotoxicity - activation of complement - crosses the placenta!129
5698022389Mother is diagnosed with Rubella.....Scenario 1: you find IgG in her, what does this mean for baby? Scenario 2: you find IgM in her, what does this mean for baby?Scenario 1: IgG means the baby is safe because IgG has crossed placenta and is protecting fetus Scenario 2: IgM tells us its the first time having infection and fetus is at risk130
5698039377How does class switching occur for IgA?- secretion of TGF-beta from infected cells and IL-5 (mostly in mucosa)131
5698045579What is the predominant antibody in mucosa? why?IgA why? because its secreted! so it can protect itself (secretory component is what protects it from degredation!!)132
5698052367IgA: dimer or monomer in secretions?dimer!! (example: breast milk)133
5698066907Which antibody is passed through breast milk?IgA in dimer form134
5698068962IgE: levels in plasmavery low!! - binds to mast cells and basophils - attacks parasites!!135
5698078215IgE causes what type of hypersensitivity reaction?Type 1136
5698135727Antigen Independent Stage of B cell development occurs where?bone marrow137
5698138573Antigen Dependent Stage of B cell development occurs where?periphery - this is the change of mature B cells to memory and plasma cells138
5697860341What links the heavy and light chains together?disulfide bonds139
5697645127What do high levels of C3b do to immune complexes?140
5697534074artificial active141
57009745653 Complement pathways142
5700994330Which markers are expressed the entire development life of the B cell?MHC II and CD19,20,21, CD40143
5700995743When is Tdt expressed during development of B cell?only during pro and a little of pre stage *ONLY during heavy chain development144
5701003903What does cyto mu+ mean?heavy chain waiting in cytoplasm for light chains!! dont travel to surface by themselves *tells us we have a pre-B cell in bone marrow!!145
5701013454When does surface IgM show in the development of B cell?immature B cell146
5701015964When does surface IgD and IgM show in development of B cell?mature B cell147
5701019959What markers are found on a plasma cell?cytoplasmic Ig+148
5701021891What markers are found on a memory B cell?IgG+, IgA+, or IgE+149
5701024389When does rag expression occur?Pro, Pre, and halfway into Immature150
5701030541Immautre IgM on a B cell tells us what?Cell is in selection!!151
5701040102What happens to soluble self-antigen B cells in bone marrow?migrate to periphery and become anergic B cells152
5701047352How do B cells get activated?when they come into contact with an antigen - become memory or plasma cells153
5701052654When are germinal centers found? where?only during actual immune responses!! - found in lymph nodes and spleen (secondary lymph tissue)154
5701064689Without T cell help, what happens to activated B cells?no class switching to different antibody isotypes155
5701069472T Cell Independent Antigens Vs T Cell Dependent AntigensIndependent: dont need T cell help but produce weaker antibody response and no class switching Dependent: need T cell help - need CD40/CD40: interaction for class switching156
5701077720Inability to express CD40L on TH cellshyper IgM syndrome: makes alot of IgM that cant class switch deficiency of IgG, IgA, IgE fails to make germinal centers - leads to reccurent resp infections and GI infections from lack of IgA157
5701092654Receptors on B cellMHC II CD40 B7158
5701094980Receptors on Helper T cellCD28 TCR CD40L cytokines159
5701116884What 3 important events occur within the germinal center during antigen dependent B cell development?- class switching - plasma/memory cell formation - affinity maturation160
5701122601What receptor interaction is required from T helper cell to undergo Class switching?Cd40/CD40L *once this communication occurs, the B cell rearranges the constant region to change isotypes (ex IgM to IgG) - no effect on variable domain!! same specificity - occurs AFTER b cell has come into contact with antigen161
5701149596What happens to affinity during the course of an immune response?affinity increases!!162
5701153459Comparison of IgM affinity to IgG affinity* IgG....much higher affinity!!163
5701175957What is the function of HLA's?bind antigenic peptides!! and present them to T cells164
5701178935HLA Class I FunctionPresent antigens to Tc Cells Responsible for presentation of endogenous antigens (viral)165
5701181299HLA Class II FunctionPresents antigens to TH cells Responsible for presentation of exogenous antigens (extracellular bacteria)166
5701192675What molecule is required for proper folding of Class I HLA?B2 microglobulin167
5701196138What type of cells are class II HLA''s expressed on?antigen presenting cells! (APCs) macrophages, B cells, dendritic cells168
5701207187HLA molecules are in the ER and peptides are in the cytoplasm, how do the HLA molecules get loaded?TAP1 and TAP 2-molecular tunnels-transport the viral peptides from the cytoplasm into the ER Required for class 1 MHC expression TAP=Transporter of Ag Processing169
5701210126Deletion in TAP1 or TAP2couldnt have MHC class I on cells170
5701211926HLA class I + antigen are in the ER, how do they make it to the cell surface to present antigen to TC cells?Vesicular transport through the golgi and to the surface171
5701218585What do proteosomes do for endogenous antigen processing?cut the viral peptides so they are 8-10aa in length for the MHC class I to pick it up! *serve as a paper shredder172
5701241925Dendritic cell expresses class I or II MHC?both!!173
5701246262Cross PrimingDendritic cells have both class I and II MHCs - this means antigens from viral infected cells can be released into cytoplasm and epressed on dendritics cells class i and II MHC molecules - Th and Tc molecules can be stimulatated from the viral antigens at the same time!!174
5701275019Autoimmune diseases: usually associated with MHC I or MHC II?class II175
5701281511What can help increase the expression of class II MHC?= some viruses (but more commonly decreased by viruses) IFN-gamma and TNF176
5701288051What viruses can decrease expression of Class II MHC?CMV HBV Adenovirus177
5701291202What happens with decreased MHC Class II expression d/t virus?NK cells take over178
5701295004CMV proteins can bind to what?B2 microglobulin!! this prevents the proper assembly of Class I MHC molecules179
5701298034HLA Summary180
5701317922A 37 year old women presents to the ED with fever, vomiting, and rash. On PR she is found to have a temp of 104.5, BP 80/58, and tachycardia. She is diagnosed with septic shock caused by E. coli. Which cytokines would most likely be responsible for the high fever? Which cytokines would be responsible for shutting down the immune response?Fever: IL-1, IL-6, TNF-alpha Shutting down immune response: IL-10181
5701323653What are cytokineschemical messengers of immune system - include interferons, chemokines, interleukins182
5701328631Chemokinecytokine that functions in chemotaxis - attract WBCs to area of inflammation183
5701752295Example of Autocrine Cytokine- IL2 made by T cells for T cells184
5701782158pleiotropyone cytokine can do multiple things185
5701785430redundancymultiple cytokines have the same function so there is multiple overlap186
5701789277Antagonist CytokinesIL-10 will shut down pro-inflammatory response187
5701800436Il-2 Functioncauses T cna B cell proliferation AUTOCRINE FUNCTION!! Stimulates growth and differentiation of T cells (TH and CTL), B cells, and NK cells188
5701803706Il-4 Functioncauses B Cells to make differnt antibotides189
5701807903mutation in gamma chains of Il-2R leads to what?SCID190
5701827118IL-2 and IL-4 share what similar structure?gamma chain of IL-2R191
5701852498Th1 cytokinesIFN-gamma TNF-alpha IL-6, IL-12192
5701855281Th2 cytokinesIL-4 IL-5 Il-10193
5701865781Interferons-alpha/beta effect on viruses!anti-viral!! - IFN-alpha is used to treat HBV, HCV, HHV-8 IFN-bea is used to treat MS194
5701878658Function of IFN-alph and Betashut down protein synthesis in uninfected cells - degrades DS RNA - gives uninfected cell communicated to protect itself195
5701883683IFN-gamma functionactivates macrophages to stimulate intracellular killing and inhibits Th2 response196
5701917181What induces IFN-gamma?IL-12 and or IL-18197
5701920002What is IFN-gamma used to treat?chronic granulomatous disease198
5701934065TNFtumor necrosis factor *cytokine with ability to kill tumor cells - alpha made by macrophages, T cell, and fibroblasts - beta made by activate B and T cells199
5701945136Side effect of anti-TNF drugsincreased suspectibility to diseae (suppressed immune response)200
5701951266Clinical Uses of TNF-alpha inhibitorsRA crohn psoariasis (humira, enbrel, remicade)201
5701973142Il-1BMade by macrophages Induces febrile response, acute phase proteins Induces pro-inflammatory response Exists as a proprotein in the inflammasome Proteolytically processed by caspase 1202
5701984902CLINICAL use of IL-2blocks Il-2 signaling - increases success of organ transplants203
5701994009IL-4 and Il-5 FunctionsMade predominantly by TH2 cells IL-4 Promotes class switching from IgM to IgE, IgG Inhibits IFN-γ production IL-5 Helps isotype switch to IgA TGF-β required Induces eosinophil development/differentiation Clinical IL-4 inhibitors Omalizumab, xolair Monoclonal antibody against IL-4 Used to treat serious allergies204
5701996084Clinical Use of Il-4 inhibitorsused to treat serious allergies205
5702000835Il-6 FunctionAcute phase proteins, febrile response Stimulates hematopoiesis Acts on plasma cells Can help with antibody switch to IgG Induces TH17 cells to become Tregs Clinical uses of IL-6 inhibitors MRA (anti-IL-6 receptor) Used to treat Rheumatoid arthritis206
5702007739Il-12 FunctionMade predominantly by macrophages Induces differentiation of TH cells to TH1 cells Thought to be first cytokine responsible for stimulating immune response Synergizes with IL-18 to induce IFN-γ from TH1 cells IL-12 is the SOS signal207
5702014497TGF-betainduces IgA isotype switching of B cells208
5702021115Il-8 or CXCL8chemotaxic! attract leukocytes to site of inflammation209
5702028285Growth Factor cytokinesIl-3: growth factor for WBC Il-7 growth factor for lymphocytes (B and T cells)210
5702068005Colony Stimulating Factors (CSF)**GM-CSF : growth factor for hematopoietic stem cells and granulocyte/monocytes **M-CSF (macrophage): essential for macrophage production **G-CSF (granulocyte) :essential for neutrophils **Erythropoietin (EPO): growth factor for RBC211
5702076373Clinical Uses of Hematopoietic Cytokines212
5702103796TCR differs from BCR in 2 major ways- TCR is NEVER secreted - TCR must recognize antigen + MHC and not free antigen - can only bind one antigen213
5702127786What t cell signaling molecule is analogous to IgB and IgA on B cells?CD3 (found on ALL t cells)214
5702148646Drugs which specifically block the function of CD3wont have any t cells in immune system!!215
5702166012is recombinase needed for TCR gene rearrangement?yes!!216
5703253981Where does t cell development and maturation occur?thymus217
5703254055Where does thymic education occur?thymus218
5703259856Where are progenitor t cells released from?bone marrow (then migrate to thymus where they receive thymic education to know the difference between MHC 1 and MHC 2)219
5703282977What is found in the cortex of the thymus?immature lymphocytes that are undergoing selection *nurse cells (specialized epithelial cells)220
5703288753What is found in the medulla of the thymus?cells that survive selection - more mature thymocytes221
5703300345Will you have a thymus with SCID?no!! if there are no t cells then thymus atrophies and dies222
5703327030T Cell Ontogeny223
5703334912Positive Selectionensures that the ab TCRs in a given individual will bind to self MHC - if you cant bind MHC, then you die224
5703342611Negative Selectionensure that thymocytes that have a high affinity for self MHC or self antigen MHC are removed!! (getting rid of bad stuff)225
5703508358What happens to T cells that have matured in the thymus?leave and enter the periphery in search of an antigen - considered to be naive until they come into contact with antigen226
5703523395Where do t cells initially come into contact with antigen?secondary lymphoid tissue! (spleen, lymph nodes ,and tertiary lymphoid tissue)227
5703532381What initiates T cell activation? what else is required?- interaction of TCR with antigen/MHC complex initiates activation but other signals are required!! (costimulatiory signals = CD28 on T cell to B7 on APC)228
5703545113What are the only cells that can present antigens to Th Cells?Anitgen presenting cells because they have co-stimulatory molecules!!! (B7)229
5703567320Where are APCs found?llymphatic tissue (secondary tissue) or in organs themselves230
5703573376How do macrophages activate naive T cells?once they are activated by IFN-gamma231
5703609399Once t cell is activated , what il's does it release to cause more t cell activation and proliferation?Il-2232
5703616153What does CAM do during Th cell-macrophage interaction?adhesion molecule - helps keep cells together long enough for all of the signals to be passed bakc and forth233
5703627426What does macrophage release once attached to t cell?Il-1, Il-6 and TNF-alpha (pro-inflammatory agents) - also upregulates MHC II and oxygen depending mechanisms to degrade pathogen234
5703637576What is CTLA-4down regulator!! when it binds to B7 it turns off the immune system - cancer cells use this so they dont get killed by the immune system235
5703656939Which cytokines from Th cells activate both B cells and macrophages?Il-4 and IFN-gamma236
5703674917Signaling Pathway in T cells237
5703702545How do superantigens cause massive immune response? i.e. toxic shock syndrome- superantigens bind to TCR and MHC II - cuases overactivation of T cells * they bind OUTSIDE of the peptide binding clef which means less specificty and activation of numerous clones of T cells....massive immune response!!!!238
5703975714What are the 3 main TH subsetsTH1 (cell mediated immunity) Th2 (parasites) Th 17 (inflammation and extracellular pathogens)239
5703980672What is the function of Th1delayed type hypersensitivity helping the development of CD8+ TC cells produces IFN-γ, IL-2, TNF-β, IL-3 and GM-CSF Helps activate macrophages and class switch to IgG down regulates TH2 response via IFN-γ240
5703985477What is the function of Th2help produce IgE produces IL-4, IL-5, IL-10 and IL-13 IL-4 and IL-13 class swtich to IgE IL-5 and TGF-β class switch to IgA downregulates TH1 responses via IL-10241
5703989466What downregulates Th1 responsesIl-10 secreted by th2242
5703993454what downregulates th2 responsesIFN-gamma secreted by th1243
5703997331Function of Th17inlammation and extracellular pathogens - inflammation -produces cytokines il-17 and il-22244
5704010542What do regulatory t clles require for development?TGF-beta245
5704010543What is the function of Tregsmake Il-10 which shuts off Th1 response!! - prevents/limits activation of th1 cells *deficiences of tregs seen in people with severe immune dysregulation and autoimmunity246
5704050837Delayed Type Hypersensitivity ReactionTh1 Response - macrophages are often targets for infection with intracellular pathogens247
5704159466What does the release of cytokines such as IFN-gamma from Th1 cells cause to happen/activates macrophages!! turn cell killing up a notch248
5704178449Full effector function of CD8's requires what?IL-2 from activated Th1 cell249
5704186503What do CD8s use to kill cells250
5704208552What does perforin release by cytotoxic t cells do?punch holes in target cell and then inject enzymes in there that kill it251
5704679760What causes chronic granulomatous disease?mutation in genes for NADPH - x linked, usually males - severe and recurrent infections with catalase positive organisms - infections if unresolved lead to formation of granulomas252
5704859174If someone is having reccurrent catalase positive disease...what will we think?chronic granulomatous diseases (cell seals off bacteria in granules because it cant kill it off)253

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