Definitions
Barriers
Disruptions
Adaptive immunity
IgG's
100

What are inherited defects 

these defects can be structural in nature or physiologic 

DNA analysis and test matings are necessary 

control is largely accomplished through identification and elimination of carriers

100

What are phsycial barriers

First line of defense

- hair, tight junctions, goblet and ciliated cells, mucins

100

What disrupts the urogenital tract and What protections does the urogenital tract have

Changes in urine, retention of urine, sexual activity, and birthing injuries 

Epithelial lining

Sphincters

Washing action

Vaginal bacterial population

100

What is the complement or crossover system 

Complement while part of the innate immune system is an important connecting component

Complement is a network of plasma proteins that are activated by pathogens and can - punch holes in bacterial cell membranes, antibody dependent activation, enhancing B-cell responses, opsonization, release of chemicals that attract immune cells 

100

What are the three main types of antibody and their importance

IgG - important to secondary responses and is a main component resulting from development of immune memory; found in blood, lymph, and other body fluids

IgA - short duration and main purpose is to prevent attachment to epithelial surfaces 

IgM - produced in response to new infections, first on the scene. main purpose in neutralization and clearance. initiates inflammatory reactions via complement activation

200

what are the 3 forms of inherited defects

lethal defects 

debilitating defects 

aesthetic defects 

200

What are antimicrobial peptides

Produced by the airway epithelial cells and prevent microbes from colonizing airways

200

What protections does the mammary gland have?

Epithelial surface

Sphincter - lining

Natural bacterial population

Chemical factors in milk

200

What is a quick summary of the complement system

A network of plasma proteins that provides connection between the innate and adaptive immune systems by:

1 - being activated by antibody

2 - enhancing b cell response

3 - improving antigen presentation

200

What are the steps of IgG production 

Forgein antigen is bound to a B cell receptor 

B cell is activated and processes the antigen and presents it

T helper cell recognizes the presented antigen and is activated 

Th cell than secretes cytokines that promote B cell growth, differentiation to plasma cells and antibody production

300

What is the immune system

Complex group of interacting structures, cells, proteins, and biochemicals that work to protect the body from infection by various foreign invaders including a variety of pathogens

300

What protections does the gastro intestinal tract have

Rumen - naturally loaded with bacteria making it hard for anything to survive

Abomasum - designed for protein digestion 

Intestines - physical barrier, shedding surface, natural bacterial population, continual flow

300

What causes mastitis

Teat injury

Backflow of milk

Disruption of natural flora 

300

What is the adaptive or acquired immune system

Learned system that has long lasting memory that allows for more rapid and stronger responses when future exposures occur to the same or similar pathogens 

300

What is the ultimate purpose/result of IgG production

Activation of B cells which differentiate to either 

- Plasma cells that produce large quantities of antibody = entire process takes up to a week therefore reliant on innate immunity during early stages of infection, antibody binds to pathogens to either disrupt them or mark them for clearance by other cells

- Memory B cells = Stored in low quantities, Allow for a more rapid response upon next encounter with the same/similar pathogen

400

What is the difference between innate and acquired immunity 

Innate - non specific, function regardless of previous exposure

Acquired - Learned based upon previous exposure, very specific and very aggressive

400

What are the problems with newborns 

No intestinal bacteria

Very poor stomach acid

Systems designed to allow for antibody absorption

400

What protections do the eyes have

Epithelial lining

Natural washing action

Chemical factors - lysozyme

400

What are the two main arms of adaptive immunity 

Humoral immunity - Closely linked to B cells, several types of antibody = IgG, IgA, IgM

Cell mediated immunity - Lymphocytic cells = B cells (produce antibody, provide immune memory), T cells (helper, cytotoxic, regulatory)

400

What are the steps of IgA production

Antigen sampling by antigen presenting cells

Dentritic cells present to mucosal associated lymphoid tissue -> B cell activation and similar help by Th cell, but they trigger a class switch from IgG to IgA

IgA producing B cells travel in lymph and blood to reach mucosal lining of respiratory tract

Plasmablasts differentiate into plasma cells and release a form of IgA which latter is released into the mucus layer of the airway lumen

500

What are epithelial cells

First barrier to protect from invasion 

Commonly associated with skin

other epithelial barriers exist - respiratory, alimentary, urogenital

500

What protection does the respiratory tract have

Nasal passages

Epithelial lining

Mucus layer - with cilia

Upper respiratory tract microbiome - competition for nutrients, direct antagonism, anti inflammatory effects

500

What are the different types of white blood cells?

Neutrophils, macrophages and dendritic cells are all phagocytes (engulf and destroy)

Eosinophils and basophils are all granulocytes (promote inflammation)

Natural killer cells (kill virus infected cells)

500

What is the purpose of the humoral immunity

Main purpose is to prevent and/or control infection from extracellular pathogens

500

Why teach about IgG and IgA

Calves are born without them - so colostrum is their source and forms the first 4-6 months of immunity

IgG is the main humoral response resulting from systemic vaccine immunization - one of the main purposes of immunization is to produce memory B cell response

Movement toward mucosal vaccines over last 10 years - many respiratory vaccines are mucosal and induce an IgA