Introduction to Immunity
Innate Immunity
Innate Immunity #2
MHC
MHC #2
100

Foreign substances that induce a host response. 

What are antigens? 

100

Composed of physical, chemical, and biological barriers that function together to prevent infectious agents from entering the body.

What is the external defense system?

100

Include PRRs, acute phase reactants, inflammation, phagocytic cells, NK cells, and innate lymphoid cells.

What is the internal defense system?

100

This MHC molecule contains one alpha chain and one beta 2-microglobulin.

What is a class I MHC molecule? 

100

Age, overall health, dose, genetic capacity, and route of inoculation. 

What are the factors that influence the immune response?

200

The ability to resist infection through normally present body functions. 

What is innate immunity?

200

Found on phagocytic cells, these receptors are able to distinguish pathogens from normally present molecules in the body. 

What are pattern recognition receptors? 

200

Levels of this acute-phase reactant rise within 4-6 hours of stimulus, are capable of opsonization and complement activation, and increased levels are a significant risk for heart disease. 

What is C-Reactive protein (CRP)?

200

Substances delivered simultaneously with an antigen to enhance the immune response. 

What is an adjuvant? 

200

Part of the antigen/immunogen that is recognized by lymphocytes. Can be linear or conformational. 

What is an epitope? 

300

Characterized by specificity for each antigen. Memory is generated. 

What is adaptive immunity?

300

Recognize by PRRs, these are found only in microorganisms. They help distinguish self from non-self. 

What are pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs)?

300

Proteins that form channels in the target cell membrane.

What are perforins? 

300

Small substances that are nonimmunogenic by themselves, but create new antigenic determinants when combined with a carrier. 

What are haptens? 

300

Presents exogenous antigen to CD4+ T cells.

What are class II MHC molecules?

400

Polymorphonuclear cells (PMNs) - neutrophils, eosinophils, and basophils, monocytes, macrophages, mast cells, and dendritic cells. 

What are the cells of the innate immune system? 

400

These receptors are strategically located on and in dendritic cells, macrophages, and monocytes, and each one recognizes a different microbial product. Once these bind to their corresponding substance, immune host responses are initialized. 

What are Toll-like receptors (TLRs)? 

400

Adherence, engulfment, formation of phagosome, granule contact, formation of phagolysosome, digestion, and excretion.

What is the process of phagocytosis? 

400

Presents endogenous antigen to CD8+ T cells.

What are class I MHC molecules? 

400

Found on all nucleated cells, regions A, B, and C of chromosome 6 code for these. 

What are class I MHC molecules? 

500

The primary lymphoid organs. 

What are the bone marrow and thymus? 

500

Chemical mediators are released to increase blood flow to the area. Increased capillary permeability allows fluids to leak into the tissues. Migration of WBCs to the surrounding tissue through diapedesis. WBCs follow chemokines via chemotaxis to the site of infection. 

What are the steps of inflammation? 

500

Cells that develop from the common lymphoid progenitor cell, but do not express markers of the lymphoid lineage, are found mainly at mucosal sites and release immunoregulatory cytokines.

What are innate lymphoid cells (ILCs)?

500

This is required during the production of class II MHC molecules to prevent endogenous peptides within the endoplasmic reticulum from binding to the class II peptide-binding groove. 

What is an invariant chain? 

500

Antigens that exist in unrelated plants or animals, but are identical to or closely related in structure so that antibody to one antigen will cross-react with the other. 

What is a heterophile antigen?