Pathogens
Viruses
Innate Immunity 1st Level
Specific Immunity 3rd Level
Phagocytosis (2nd level)
100

A pathogen that is non-living.

What is virus? (accept prion)

100

What is a requirement for viral replication.

What is a living host cell?

100

The first immunological barrier against disease.

What is skin?

100

The scientific name for “white blood cells”.

What is leukocytes?

100

Which of the following is not a phagocyte: neutrophil, mast cell, NK cell

What is NK cell?

200

The size of a bacteria is _____________ than a virus.

What is LARGER?

200

Name a disease that can be spread by a vector.

What is malaria? (accept zika or ebola or black plague)

200

When a localized area exhibits redness, swelling and heat, it is an indication that this has occurred.

What is inflammation?

200

Shaped like a Y these special proteins help bond to and destroy foreign bodies?

What is antibodies?

200

Contains and enzyme that digest bacteria.

What is a lysosome? 

300

Name 5  general types of pathogens.

What are 

virus, bacteria, protist, fungi, parasitic worms, 

prions

300

All viruses must have these 3 structures. (Name at least 2)

What are:

genetic material, protein capsid/core, glycoprotein spikes

300

A bodily defense that removes pathogens from the respiratory tract. 

What is sneezing? (accept coughing)

300

Specifc defense cells that specialize in attacking cancer cells and virus-infected cells. 

What are Cytotoxic T Cells (Killer T Cells)?

300

In phagocytosis, digested contents are eliminated by:

What is exocytosis?

400

Name 3 methods of disease transmission.

What are:

saliva, blood, urine, sneeze, cough, air, water

400

What are symptoms of variolla major?  (Name THREE)

What is fever, back pain, headache, scabs, raised bumps, vomiting, diarrhoea?  

400

The scientific name for white blood cells?

What is a leukocyte? 

400

Cells responsible for remembering how to make an antibody.

What are Memory B Cells?

400

Material left behind after phagocytosis?

What is pus?

500

The primary cause of disease transmission.

What is population density?

500

Why do doctors suggest that people get a flu vaccine every year?

Because the Influenza virus mutates frequently.

500

The 3 components of the 1st line of immunological defense. 

What are skin, mucus membranes and their secretions (eg stomach acid)

500

Cells that are active in activating the specific immune system if it recognises an antigen?

What are Helper T Cells?

500

Phagocytes migrate to sites of infection by this process.

What is chemotaxis?