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Immunology!

UCI SOM Gutman

QuestionAnswer
APC antigen processing cells (all are phagocytic)
Lymphoid tissues lymph nodes, spleen, peyers patches et al, thymus, bone marrow, travel via the blood and lymph
Iatrogenic illness brought on by healer
Innate immunity no adaptive specificity, no memory, mucous membrane, phagocytes, complement, anti-bacterial peptides
Adaptive immunity specificity, memory, B and T cells
Humoral immunity protects from what protection from extracellular parasites (antibody mediated); test is if you can transfer immunity by injecting serum into a host
Cell-mediated immunity protects from what protection from intracellular parasites
Active immunity host creates own antibodies
Passive immunity antibodies are injected into host (not created by host)
Challenge the act of giving the host an antigen to see if it’s immune
Afferent limb where antigen uptake and processing takes place
Central limb where proliferation and differentiation takes place (formed in formal lymphoid tissues)
Efferent limb where target killing, tolerence, etc. occur
Epitope (=antigenic determinant) minimum target structure to which Ab binds
Immunogen elicits immune response
Hapten small molecule that, when combined to a larger molecule, will elicit an immune response
Adjuvant any material that increases the immunogenicity of some antigen (the water/oil antigen thingy)
Physical manifestations of an antibody precipitation for soluble Ag, agglutination for particulate Ag, and binding
Biological effects of antibodies protection, immobilization, cytolysis, opsonization
Equivalence point of most precipitate on the precipitin curve
Prozone effect antibody excess on precipitin curve resulting in less precipitation
Ouchterlony place antigen and antibody away from eachother in agarose gel and see where they precipitate (reversible)
Radial immunodiffusion place antigen in antibody and measure the diameter of the circle of precipitate to see how much lysis occured
SRBC sheep red blood cells
Reverse agglutination latex coated with antibody; antigen is added (way to check which antigen it is) and agglutination is checked
Serological typed by antibodies
Passive hemagglutination place antigen and antibody in many test tubes and see which ones clump on bottom (no agglutination b/c the antigens can roll over eachother to get to the bottom of the test tube) or which ones agglutinate and therefore have a broad smear across the bottom
ELISA Enzym-Linked ImmunoSorbent Assay; Ag is bound to plate, antibody is labeled with a visible dye
Electrophoresis of normal serum (proteins from + to -) albumin (most negative; closest to +), alpha 1, alpha2, beta, gamma (short, broad peak near zero)
Bruton’s disease x-linked; impaired maturation and development of antibodies (B-cell defect)
RIA RadioImmunoAssay (used radioactive isotopes); same as ELISA except ELISA is safer and currently used
Equilibrium dialysis used to analyze the binding of Ab to Ag and to determine valency and strength of binding
Papain cleaves IgG into 2Fab and Fc
Pepsin cleaves IgG into F(ab)2 and Fc (degraded)
What does ab stand for in Fab antigen binding
What does c stand for in Fc crystallizing
What determines the class and subclass of an antibody heavy chain
Light chain types kappa and lambda
# of IgG subclasses, # binding sites, H-chain classes, and biological properties 4; 2; gamma 1, 2, 3, 4; c-fixing, placental x-fer
# of IgM subclasses, # binding sites, H-chain classes, and biological properties 0; 10; mu; c-fixing, B-cell surface Ig
# of IgA subclasses, # binding sites, H-chain classes, and biological properties 2; 2,4,6; alpha 1, 2; secretory Ig
# of IgD subclasses, # binding sites, H-chain classes, and biological properties 0; 2; delta; b-cell surface Ig
# of IgE subclasses, # binding sites, H-chain classes, and biological properties 0; 2; epsilon; reaginic Ig
Order of concentration in Igs in serum G>M>A>D>E; found in mg/ml
Size of IgG 150 KDa
Monoclonal proteins myeloma proteins and Bence-Jones Proteins (L-chains)
Monoclonal gammopathies occurs when a certain immunoglobulin becomes homogenous
CDR complementarity determining region (hypervariable region of variable region of Igs)
Affinity maturation progression in the affinity of an Ig for its antigen over time
complement group of serum proteins activated by ag=ab complexes resulting in lysis or other stuff
which complement proteins have cytolysis ability C5b6789
which complement proteins have anaphylotoxin activity C3a, C5a
which complement proteins have chemotaxis activity C5a, C5b67
Which complement proteins have opsonization activity C3b
Which complement proteins have tissue damage ability C5b6789, PMN's
MAC membrane attack complex; all 3 complement pathways can produce MAC
how is the classical pathway activated heat
complement pathway steps 1-5 1)S+A->SA 2)C1q, C1r, C1s->C1qrs 3)SA+C1qrs->SAC1qrs 3)C1qrs+C4->C1qrs/4b+C4a 4)C1qrs/4b+C2->C1qrs/4b2b+C2a 5)C4b2b+C3->C4b2b3b+C3a
complement pathway steps 6-9 6)C4b2b3b+C5->C4b2b3b5b+C5a 7)C4b2b3b5b+C6+C7->C4b2b3b5b67 8)C5b67+C8->C5b678 9)C5b678+C9->C5b6789
convertase can cleave a complement protein
alternate pathway 1)B+C3b->BbC3b+Ba 2)BbC3b+P->PBbC3b 3)PBbC3b+C3->PBb(C3b)2+C3a which can fix C5, C6 etc.
what triggers the alternate pathway microorganisms, parasites, aggregated immunoglobulin
MBLECTIN pathway 1)MBLECTIN+mannan->MBLECTIN/mannan/MASP-1/MASP-2 which is a C4 convertase
advantages/disadvantages of alternate and MBLECTIN pathways don't need Ab to work; not very good specificity and no memory
final effects of complement lysis, opsoniziation and inflammation
Immune complex disease Ag-Ab complexes binding the bloodstream to blood vessels and kidney glomeruli
one-shot serum sickness immune complex disease that goes away quickly because the antigen is a one-shot activity; if the antigen is normal tissue, autoimmunity ensues
how many kappa genes 1
how many lambda genes 4
how many heavy chain genes 9
allelic variants of immunoglobulin genes Km, G1m, G2m, G3m, G4m, Em, A2m
how many isotypes of ig's are there; how many does each person have 14 different isotypes present in all humans
allotype definition and how are they inherited allelic variants within constant regions; inherited in mendelian co-dominant fashion
idiotype unique combination of Vh and Vl
clonal selection/expansion the proliferation of antibody cell specific to a certain antigen
affinity maturation as a response progresses, the antibodies with higher affinity will be selected
combinatorial joining joining a random V-region with one of the 5 J-segments in Kappa or several D-segments in heavy chain
combinatorial association random association of H- and L-chains
germ-line theory for every kappa-chain V-region, there exists one unique germ-line gene
somatic theory only one germ-line gene exists and somatic mutation accounts for all kappa-chain v-regions
on what chromosome are the kappa genes 2
on what chromosome are the lambda genes 22
on what chromosome are the heavy chain genes 14
j-segments piece on a kappa chain between the V and C regions
what two immunoglobulins can be produced simultaneously and continuously by B-cells IgM and IgD
what determines whether an Ig is execreted versus in a membrane-bound form alternate mRNA splicing
TCR T-cell receptor
3 differences in structure/expression of TCR's compared with Ig 1)TCR has a single combining site 2)somatic mutation does not occur in TCRs 3)TCR's only exist as membrane-bound molecules
RAG-1 and RAG-2 two recombinase enzymes necessary for TCR and IgR V(D)J recombination; knock-out of RAG proteins leads to inability to produce mature T and B cells
kappa gene structure V(n), J, C
lambda gene structure V(n), J, C1, J, C2, J, C3, J, C7
heavy chain gene structure V(n), D, J, Cmu, Cdelta, C gamma till ends with Calpha2
CMI cell-mediated immunity
what produces most immunoglobulins plasma cells
ratio of H and L-chains in normal plasma levels as opposed to myeloma cells similar ratio in normal cells; way more L-chains in myeloma cells (these become bence-jones proteins)
where does carbohydrate add onto (not the Asn, but what part of Ig) the Ig in normal cells only H-chain (myeloma cells put them on Vh and Vl)
when and to whom is the J-chain added just prior to being secreted; on IgM and IgA
IgA secretion 4 steps 1)(IgA)2 or 3 is secreted into extracellular space 2)epithelial cells have S-piece precursor that binds IgA 3)IgA with Sp is transported to the other side of epithelial cell, Sp is cleaved into 2 pieces 4)IgA with one part of Sp is secreted into lumen
how many idiotypes does one AFC produce 1
allelic exclusion for every immunoglobulin gene in a B-cell or plasma cell, only one allele is expressed
heavy chain class switching; can you go backwards? M to D to G to A to G to E to A; you cannot go back
how are membrane IgM's and free IgM's different C-terminal sequence; no J-chain on membrane IgM's and they are therefore monomeric
what does a virgin B-cell only produce membrane-bound IgM
difference among virgin B-cells, memory B-cells, and plasma cells virgin B-cells produce only membrane-bound Ig's; virgins turn into memory B-cells after first antigen and produce membrane bound and secretory Ig's; these become plasma cells after second antigen stimulation and only secrete Ig's
why start with IgM its avidity compensates for lack of affinity but it is very expensive to make; as person develops, she can make IgG's with higher affinity and with less cost
erythroblastosis fetalis results from infants blood reaching the mother's bloodstream during birth, creating antibodies and those antibodies attacking the next child
isoagglutinins natural antibodies against whichever of the A and B antigens is not present in that persons RBCs
crossmatching mixing donor RBCs with acceptor RBCs to make sure it will work
stem carbohydrate structure, B structure, A structure RBC—O-GLU(-Nac)-GAL-FUC; B has a GAL on the stem's GAL; A has a NAc on B's extra GAL
what class of Ig's are made against foreign blood groups IgM
% of population that is Rh- 15%
% of population that is A, B, AB, O 40%, 10%, 5%, 45%
what kind of natural antibodies do we have against Rh NONE
HDN hemolytic disease of the newborn (same as erythroblastosis fetalis)
exchange transfusion total replacement of infant's blood to remove the anti-Rh antibodies and provide undamaged RBCs
RhoGam anti-Rh antibody injected into the mother so that she doesn't develop them so as to stop erythroblastosis fetalis
MHC major histocompatibility complex; HLA in human, H-2 in mouse
HLA human leukocyte antigen system is the name of the MHC in humans
first set rejection primary immune response to a graft (the first rejection)
isograft/syngeneic graft graft from a genetically identical individuals
allograft transplant from one individual to another with a different genotype
second set rejection second rejection to the same graft but is much quicker
is graft rejection a cell mediated or humoral mediated immunity cell mediated
what can transfer only humoral or only cellular immunity serum can only transfer humoral, but nothing can transfer just cellular
immunological enhancement when circulating antibodies protect a graft from rejection
what are the antigens triggering graft rejection cell surface glycoproteins=histocompatibility complex
HLA class I and class II genes I-A,B,C (these are SD); II-D (DP, DQ, DR) (these are LD)
H-2 class I and class II genes I-D,L,K II- I-A, I-E
Ir genes immune response genes which encode class II antigens (specifically in mice)
SD serologically determined (type I in HLA)
LD lymphocyte determined (mixed lymphocyte reaction) (type II in HLA)
which cells express class I antigens all nucleated cells
which HLA class is the major target for graft rejection class I
do all cells express class II NO
class III genes C2, C4, and B (S in mouse) code for complement components
what do class II molecules do required for the process of antigen presentation to helper T-cells
graft-versus-host reaction the graft attacks the host
3 conditions of graft vs. host rxn to occur 1)graft must contain immunocompetent cells 2)graft must be capable of recognizing foreign antigens on host tissue 3)recipient must be incapable of rejecting the grafted tissue
Created by: droid
 

 



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