Title: XIII. Basics of Immunology
1XIII. Basics of Immunology
2A. Overview of Immunity
- What are the 2 parts of the immune system?
- a. Innate
- 1) What are the 2 parts of the innate
immunity? - a) Barriers and some chemicals
- released by the barriers
- b) Phagocytes, complement, interferon,
- inflammations fever
- 2) When does it start?
- You are born with it
-
3- b. Adaptive immunity or Cell mediated or
Specific immunity - 1) Define this part?
- acquired ability to recognize destroy a
pathogen or its products and is activated by
exposure of the immune system to the pathogen - 2) What are adaptive responses directed to?
- certain molecules on the pathogen
-
-
4Bauman, Robert W. Microbiology Text
5 2. Cells Organs of the Immune System
- What do the following components of the blood and
lymph do? - 1) Erythrocytes Carry O2 from lungs to tissue
some CO2 from tissue to lungs - 2) Leukocytes
- a) monocytes
- develop into macrophages or dendritic cells
- b) eosinophils
- Involved in phagocytosis
- important in battling helminth infections
6- c) B lymphocytes
- precursors to plasma cells which produce
antibodies - d) T lympohcytes
- involved in cell killing activation of B
lymphocytes other parts of the cell mediated
immunity - e) neutrophils-
- Phagocytic granulocytes they do phagocytosis
can cause inflammation allergy-like symptoms
7- f) mast cells
- granulocytes that when they undergo
degranulation they can cause inflammation and
allergy-like symptoms - 3) plasma
- whole blood when taken out of the body it
quickly forms an insoluble clot this can trap
cells - 4) serum-
- has no cells or clotting proteins but does
have other proteins like antibody proteins
8- b. What is the circulation of the blood?
9- c. What is the function of the Lymph system?
- to collect fluid that has left the circulatory
system, filter it with lymph nodes and return it
to the circulatory system through the thoracic
lymph duct.
10- d. What are the primary organs of the lymph
system? - 1) bone marrow
- 2) thymus
- e. What are the secondary organs of the lymph
system? - 1) lymph nodes
- 2) spleen
- 3) Mucosal-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT)
11- f. myeloid cells
- 1) What 2 categories can they be divided into
what is the function of each? - a) monocytes
- become macrophages which are phagocytic cells
- b) granulocytes
- neutrophils phagocytosis
- others release granules resulting in
inflammation and/or allergy like symptoms
123. The Innate response after the physical
chemical barrier part of the innate immune system
has been breached
- What is the 1st cell type active in the
inflammatory response what is its function? - phagocyte
- function is to engulf and destroy pathogens
- some then function as antigen presenting cells
(APC) - b. What are APCs?
- Phagocytes that process and display peptide
antigens from the invader
13 14- d. Neutrophils
- 1) What is another name for them?
- polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs)
- 2) Where are they predominantly found?
- the bloodstream and bone marrow
- 3) What would a high count in the blood
indicate? - active response to a current infection
15- e. Monocytes
- 1) What do monocytes become?
- macrophages
- 2) What is the difference between fixed
macrophages and wandering macrophages? - Fixed stay permanently in a location and are
named for their location - Alveolar macrophages lung
- microglia CNS
- Kupffer cells liver
- Wandering leave the blood via diapedesis and
scavenge while traveling
16- 3. Macrophages and Dendritic cells also act as
APCs. They both present the antigen to T cells
which commences the adaptive immune response.
17Figure A is a neutrophil note the segmented
nucleus is a monocyte everything else
are RBC
Figure B is a circulating lymphocyte
18- f. How do the following bacteria inhibit
phagocytes? - 1) Staphylococcus aureus
- produces carotenoids that neutralize singlet
oxygen used in - phagolysosmes to kill bacteria
- 2) Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- uses its cell wall glycolipids to absorb
OH-and O2-
19- g. How do the following chemicals or structures
interfere with phagocytosis? - 1) leukocidins
- phagocyte-killing proteins upon the death of
the phagocyte the pathogen is released - 2)capsules
- This structure prevents the adherence of the
phagocyte - 3) M protein
- alters the surface of the bacterial cell
preventing phagocytosis
20- 4. Inflammation, Fever and Septic Shock
- a. What are the signs and symptoms of
inflammation? - 1) erythema (redness)- due to increased blood
flow to the area - 2) edema (swelling) due to leaky capillaries
- 3) pain- due to increase fluid equals increased
pressure on nerve endings - 4) heat- due to increased blood flow to the area
21- b. Who are the 1st cells to arrive at the site
of invasion and what attracts them there? - neutrophils
- interleukins and other soluble chemoattractants
Figure (a) is a neutrophil ingesting and killing
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Figure (b) skin macrophage that has ingested
Leishmania
22- c. What do they do, what do they secrete and
what do their secretions do? - migrate to the damaged cells and ingest them
- They secrete chemokines like macrophage
inflammatory proteins a and ß - These chemicals recruit more macrophages to
the site -
23- d. What is the usual outcome of the inflammatory
response? - localizing of pathogen then destruction of
pathogen - e. What can an inflammatory response that
spreads cells mediators throughout the system
lead to? - Septic shock
- What bacteria are the most common causes of
this? - Gram-negative enteric bacteria such as
Salmonella or E. coli
24Signs Symptoms of Septic Shock
- Septic shock can affect any part of the body,
including the heart, brain, kidneys, liver,
intestines. Symptoms may include - Cool, pale extremities
- High or very low temperature, chills
- Lightheadedness
- Low blood pressure, especially when standing
- Low urine output
- Palpitations
- Rapid heart rate
- Restlessness, agitation, lethargy, or confusion
- Shortness of breath
255. Adaptive Immune Response
- f. What is the problem with wide vasodilation
increased vascular permeability? - Massive movement of fluids into the CNS drop in
blood pressure and edema in the CNS system wide - If the pathogen gets through the innate response
and an APC activates a T-cell what are the 2
parts of the cell-mediated response that are
activated? - 1) T-cytotoxic cells may be activated to
directly attack destroy antigen bearing cells - 2) T-helper cells are activated
- a) TH1secrete cytokines activate macrophages
- b) TH2 interact with B cells to stimulate Ab
prod. -
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27- b. What is the broad based outcome of activating
other T cells? - cell mediated immunity inflammation, killing
antigen destruction - c. What is the broad based outcome of activating
B cells? - antigen specific, antibody-mediated immunity
complement activation destruction - d. What is immune memory and what does it allow
our bodies to do? - When T B cells are activated they divide to
become active cells (T cells) or plasma cells
(B cells) memory cells - Active cells do their job, plasma cells produce
antibodies and memory cells provide a faster
response if the antigen comes back
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29- 1) How do we take advantage of immune memory?
- vaccination
- e. What is tolerance and why is it important?
- The elimination of any adaptive immune response
to self - Important to prevent destruction of our cells
due to our own immune system attacking them.
30B. Antigens Antigen Presentation
- Distinguish between antigens immunogens
- antigens substances that react with Ab or TCRs
- Immunogens substances that induce an immune
response - 2. What are the important intrinsic properties
of immunogens? - Molecular size- very small molecules called
haptens cannot induce an immune response but can
be bound by Ab but if attached to a larger
protein they become immunogens pencillin is a
hapten - immunogens need to have a MW of 10,000 daltons
or larger
31- b. Molecular complexity
- nonrepeating polymers and complex carbs make
good immunogens - But nucleic acids, simple polysaccharides and
lipids dont due to their repeating monomeric
structure - c. appropriate physical form
- insoluble forms are more readily phagocytosed
and thus are better immunogens than soluble forms
which are not as often digested by phagocytes.
32- 3. What are the important extrinsic properties of
immunogens? - a. dose of immunogen
- in mammals 10 µg- 1 g are effective
- extremely high or low doses may invoke
tolerance suppress the immune response - b. route of administration
- those administered parenterally are more
effective than oral or topical routes- due to
greater degradation - c. foreign nature
- if it is like a self antigen then tolerance
will prevent a - response.
334. What is an epitope? What is another name for
it?
- The portion of the antigen that the antibody or
TCR interacts with Antigenic determinant
34- 5. What cells have the following and what is the
function of the following in relation to antigen
presentation to T lymphocytes? - a. T Cell Receptor (TCR)
- found on T cells
- bind a peptide antigen only when it is bound to
a self protein the MHC protein -
35- b. MHC
- Major Histocompatibility Complex Proteins
- In humans collectively called Human leukocyte
antigens - Collectively fxn as antigen presenting molecules
- 1) Class I
- Found on the surface of all nucleated cells
- 2) Class II
- found only on the surface of B lymphocytes,
macrophages, and dendritic cells
36- 6. What coreceptor do the following cells express
and what do each bind to? - a. TH cells
- CD4 protein
- Bind only to Class II proteins
- b. TC cells
- CD8 protein
- Bind only to Class I proteins
37- C. T Lymphocytes
- 1. How do cytotoxic T cells kill?
- Contact starts w/
- TCR/CD8 binding to
- APC
- Degranulation
- Perforin inserts
- itself in membrane
- Forms a pore
- Granzymes enter cell and trigger apoptosis
-
382. How are NK cells similar and different from
cytotoxic T cells? What kinds of cells do they
kill
- Similar in their ability to kill cancer cells and
cells infected w/ intracellular pathogens like
viruses - Differ because they are not specific but part of
innate immunity - Kill cancer and virally infected cells
395. How are T-inflammatory cells activated and
what do they stimulate?
- Also called TH1 cells are activated by APC
macrophages (MHC II) - They then produce cytokines promoting
phagocytosis inflammation
404. How do B cells TH2 cells work together to
produce an activated B cell?
- B cells bind the antigen by the Ig receptor on
their surface - The antigen antibody complex is endocytosed
- Antigen is degraded processed then presented
to TH2 cell - This stimulates the TH2 cell to release cytokines
- The cytokines stimulate the same B cell to divide
into plasma memory cells
41D. Antibodies
- 1. Draw and label a basic IgG antibody
Antigen binding sites
42- 2. List the 5 classes of antibodies, give their
major functions, where they are found and any
other distinguishing characteristics
43- 3. What is the clonal selection theory?
444. Draw a graph to represent the primary and
secondary antibody responses in serum. What does
the graph clearly show?
The graph clearly shows that the secondary
response is greater than the primary Response.
In the primary response IgM is produced and in
the secondary response IgG is produced.
45- 5. What are the 4 major potential functions of an
antibody response? - a. Viral neutralization/Opsonization bind to
surface of virus or bacteria block binding to
host cells enhance phagocytosis - b. Agglutination Ab-mediated clumping
- c. Precipitation Ab cross-links soluble
antigens to bring them out of solution to
enhance phagocytosis - d. Activation of complement system Ab binding
to bacterial surface triggers the complement
cascade
46- 6. Complement
- a. What is complement?
- a group of proteins that work together to
produce a variety of innate and adaptive immunity - b. What are the 2 paths for activation?
- Perperdin or alternate pathway (innate)
- Classical pathway (Adaptive)
- c. What are the 3 potential outcomes
- 1) opsonization
- 2) MAC attack
- 3) inflammation
-
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48E. Immunity and Prevention of Infectious Disease
- Natural immunity
- How do animals acquire natural active immunity?
- When they get an infection that then initiates
an adaptive immune response - This generates memory T and B cells that will
usually protect from subsequent exposures
49- b. In the following disorders what part of the
immune system is lacking and what does it result
in? - 1) aggammaglobulinemia
- Have genetic defects in B cells no antibodies
- suffer from recurrent, life-threatening
bacterial infections but have normal immune
response to viral infections - 2) DiGeorges syndrome
- Thymus does not mature thus no production of
mature T cells - suffer from serious recurring viral infections
and other intracellular pathogens -
-
-
50- 3) AIDS
- can result in total depletion of TH cells
- no effective B cell or T cell immunity
- Suffer from recurrent viral, fungal and
- bacterial infections
- c. How do animals acquire natural passive
immunity? - This is the transfer of antibodies from mother
to child either through the placenta or through
breast feeding - No memory results so this is temporary protection
51- 2. Artificial Immunity and Immunizations
- a. What is artificial active immunity?
- When an organism receives injects of a weakened
organisms or just the antigen - This then stimulates the adaptive immune system
memory without developing the disease - We call this vaccination
- b. What is artificial passive immunity?
- When we receive an injection of antiserum which
contains the antibodies - No memory developed- short lived
52- c. What is used for immunization?
- inactivated whole organism, or antigen
- d. What do the following terms mean and how do
they apply to vaccination? - 1) toxoid
- exotoxin that has been made nonpathogenic by
some treatment - 2) attenuated
- either a mutant strain of a pathogen that has
lost its virulence or a weakened pathogen - Can be a problem for immunocompromised people
53- e. Complete on your own from Table 30.2
- Laboratory ID of clinical pathogens
54F. Growth Dependent Diagnostic methods
- 1. Blood cultures
- a. What is bacteremia?
- bacteria in the blood
- When does it occur?
- in healthy individuals it is a result of dental
surgery or trauma - What are the common pathogens involved?
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa, E. coli, Klebsiella
pneumoniae, Staph aureus Streptococcus pyogenes -
55- b. What is septicemia and what can be its
outcome? - bacteria multiplying in the blood and traveling
to other areas to initiate new infections - septic shock
- c. What is the standard blood culture procedure?
- Draw 20 mL of blood asceptically from a vein
- Inject it into 2 blood culture bottles w/
anticoagulant general purpose culture media - Incubate 1 in aerobic conditions
- Incubate other under anoxic conditions
- These are checked several times an hour for 5
days -
-
56- 2. Urine cultures
- a. Why can the interpretation of results be
confusing - Disease causes are often normal flora such as E.
coli - b. What are some urinary tract infecting
bacteria? - E. coli, Klebsiella, Enterobacter, Proteus,
Pseudomonas, Staph saprophyticus and Enterococcus
faecalis - c. What 2 media are commonly used to ID microbes
found? What do they do? - blood agar for general growth
- MacConkey or EMB
- Differentiate lactose fermentors from
nonfermentors and eliminate Staphs (common
contaminants)
57- 2. Fecal Cultures
- a. What is especially important with these
samples? - proper collection and storage
- to much delay between sampling and processing
may interfere with the detection of Shigella and
Salmonella - 3. Wounds Abcesses
- a. What is the best sampling method for
abscesses? - aspirate the pus with a sterile syringe after
disinfection of the skin surface around the site -
58- b. What are some bacteria commonly found under
these conditions - S. aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and
Bacterioides and Clostridium - 5. Culture of Anaerobic Microbes
- a. What are 3 ways this media differs from the
media for aerobic microbes? - 1)richer in organic constituents
- 2)contain reducing agents to remove O2
- i.e. thioglycollate or cysteine
- 3)contain a redox indicator for detecting
anoxic conditions
59- b. What are specimen collection, handling and
processing designed to do? - prevent Oxygen contamination
- c. What are some of the ways an anoxic
environment is created for culturing of these
bacteria? - Use environments with Oxygen free gas mixture
like CO2 and N2 - remove O2 from a jar with some chemical means
like a H2 generator in the presence of palladium
catalyst it will form water pulling the O2 out of
the air in the jar -
60G. Immunology and Clinical Diagnostic methods
- How is direct agglutination used in blood typing?
-
Neg
Pos for B
Pos for A
61- b. Distinguish between direct and indirect ELISA
test - Direct uses Antibodies to the antigen of
interest attached to the wells of a microtiter
plate - Add patient serum that is suspected of
containing the antigen to well - Detect with antivirus antibody with an enzyme
attached that will cause a color change when the
substrate is added - So in the end you have detected the presence of
the actual antigen -
-
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63- Indirect uses antigen attached to the microtiter
plate - Add patient serum and if antibody is present it
attaches to antigen - Add anti-IgG with conjugated enzyme if Ab is
present it attaches - Add substrate and wait for color change
- IN the end what you have detected is the presence
of the Ab (not the antigen)
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