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100

What is a property of immune cells by which they will not attack normal self-cells; the ability to differentiate self from foreign and only attack foreign substances?

Self-tolerance

100

What is the main first-line defense physical barrier in animals?


Epithelial tissue

100

What are signaling proteins that help cells communicate with each other, initiating and coordinating immune actions?

Cytokines

100

What color do eosinophil granules stain?

Red-orange

100

What cell type primarily makes tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α)? 

Macrophages

100

Which leukocyte is the most abundant in the blood?


Neutrophils

100

What are monocytes called once they enter tissues?

Macrophages

100

Which pathway is complement proteins activated by directly interacting with pathogen?

Alternative Pathway

200

What two leukocytes are the first to enter damaged tissue?


Neutrophils & Monocytes

200

What proposes a decrease in diversity and levels of microbes in our normal microbiota may negatively affect immune responses?


Hygiene hypothesis

200

What are 2 primary lymphoid tissues?

Thymus

Bone Marrow

200

1. Besides eicosanoids and kinins, what other vasoactive molecule induces vascular changes? 

2. What is the main cell found in tissues that produce this molecule?


1. Histamine

2. Mast cells

200

What two molecules are released from neutrophil granules?


Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) and enzymes 

200

1. What color do basophil granules stain? 

2. What notable molecule is found in basophil granules?


1. Dark purple

2. Histamine

200

What are the three outcomes of complement activation?

Opsonization

Cytolysis

Inflammation

200

What are pyrogens? 


Fever-inducing agents; many bacterial toxins act as pyrogens.

They trigger the release of cytokines

300

What are four types of granulocytes?

Neutrophils

Eosinophils

Basophils

Mast cells

300

What is the importance of C3 in the complement system?


The key trigger point for cascade activation and regulation

300

How do nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (SAIDs) reduce pain and inflammation?


By reducing eicosanoid production

300

What is the main goal of first-line innate defenses?


Attempt to prevent pathogen entry

300

What is the function of the spleen?


Filters blood rather than lymph

300

What is the function of lysozyme?


breaks down bacterial cell walls

300

1. What cell type primarily makes tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α)? 

2. What is the function of TNF-α?


1. Macrophages

2. Stimulates inflammation and fever, and kills tumor cells

300

What are four main cardinal signs of inflammation?


Redness

Pain

Localized heat (not fever)

Swelling

400

What is the function of the mucociliary escalator?

Sweeps away from the lungs and toward the mouth by ciliated cells

400

What are the roles of interleukins?


Activating adaptive and innate immune responses and stimulating the production of new blood cells and platelets

400

What is the function of lymph nodes?


Serve as filtering and screening centers for lymph before returning it to the bloodstream

400

What is edema?


Generalized swelling, often in the extremities, in response to fluid accumulation in tissues

400

What are three similarities shared by innate and adaptive immunity?


-Both kill invaders

-Both are effective against diverse threats

-Both distinguish self from foreign

400

What are three types of agranulocytes?

Monocytes

Dendritic cells

Lymphocytes

400

Which of these cells are involved in innate immunity and adaptive immunity? (NK cells, T cells, & B cells)

Innate immunity - NK cells

Adaptive immunity - T cells & B cells

400

What is membrane attack complex?


An attack complex made by complement proteins; it drills into cells, causing them to burst (undergo cytolysis)

500

How do antipyretic drugs work?


By limiting the production of prostaglandins in the hypothalamus, which is ultimately what “resets” the body’s thermostat

500

What are four chemical barriers?

- Stomach acid 

- Mucus/cilia trapping and sweeping action 

- Lysozyme in tears, mucus, saliva, breast milk

- Antimicrobial peptides such as defensins (AMPs) 

500

What is the relationship between our normal microbiota and immune function?


Immune system allows certain microbes to live as symbiotic partners in and on our bodies while excluding others, those microbes fine-tune our immune system to fight pathogens while training immune system to tolerate nonpathogens, food, and self-tissues

500

Sometimes when we are sick, our lymph nodes swell. What causes this?


Upon detecting an invading microbe, leukocytes residing in a node rapidly multiply in order to expand the population available to combat it which causes swelling

500

What features of the epidermis make skin one of our most important physical barriers?


Its tightly compacted dead epithelial cells are enriched with specialized proteins (such as keratin) and lipids to serve as a water-resistant layer

500

Why are fevers of 105 F or above life-threatening?



Cellular enzymes and other proteins will begin to denature and stop working at that temperature range

500

What are the three general phases of inflammation and briefly describe each?


Vascular Changes – Chemical alarm signals released by damaged cells and leukocytes increase blood flow and vessel permeability

Leukocyte recruitment – Cytokines recruit leukocytes. Neutrophils arrive first, followed by monocytes, which mature into macrophages. Neutrophils and macrophages phagocytize invaders and recruit other leukocytes

Resolution – Inflammation signals decrease; tissue repair initiated

500

What two steps allow cells to exit blood vessels and enter tissues?

Margination - The first step by which cells exit blood vessels in the recruitment phase of inflammation; leukocytes slow down as they roll along vessel walls, and they eventually adhere to the vessel wall and stop rolling.

Diapedesis - Also called transmigration or extravasation; a process whereby white blood cells dramatically change shape in order to squeeze out of a blood vessel during the recruitment phase of inflammation.

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