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Test 1 Definition

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Question
Answer
Effector mechanism   The physiological and cellular processes used by the immune system to destroy pathogens and remove them from the body  
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Effecter cell   lymphocytes that can mediate the removal of pathogens without the need for further differentiation  
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Innate immunity   the host of defenses mechanisms that act from the start of an infection and do not adapt to a particular pathogen  
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adaptive immunity   the response of antigen-specific B and T lymphocytes to antigen, including the development of immunological memory  
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Primary response   the adaptive immune response that follows a person’s first exposure to an antigen  
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Secondary response   the adaptive immune response provoked by a second exposure to and antigen. It differs from primary response by starting sooner and building more quickly  
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Pluripotent   a stems cell that will become a progenitor  
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Hematopoietic cells   stem cell in bone marrow that gives rise to all the cellular elements of the blood.  
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Leukocyte   a general term for a white blood cell: lymphocyte granulocyte and monocyte  
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Myeloid cells   stem cells in the bone marrow that give rise to granulocytes, monocytes and macrophage  
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Lymphoid cells   stem cells in the bone marrow that give rise to all of the lymphocytes  
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Granulocyte   white blood cells with irregularly shaped, multilobed nuclei and cytoplasmic granules: Neutrophils, Basophils, Eoisonophils, aka polymorphonuclear leukocytes  
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Phagocyte   a cell specialized to perform phagocytosis, the principal phagocytic cell in mammals are neutrophils and macrophage  
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Progenitor   a cell that has to become something  
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Stem cell   infinite mitotic divisions can become any cell  
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Primary lymphoid tissue   anatomical sites of lymphocyte developlmet. The bone marrow and the thymus  
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Secondary (peripheral) lymphoid tissue   the lymph nodes , spleen(secondary lymphoid organs), and malt. The tissues in chich immune responses are intiated.  
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Recirculation   of lymphocytes, their continual movement from blood to secondary lymphoid tissue to lymp and back to the blood. An exception to this pattern is traffic to the spleen; in which they both enter and leave  
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Afferent   vessels that bring lymph to the node  
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Efferent   take lymph away from the nodes.  
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Plasma cell   terminally differentiated B lymphocyte that secrete antibody  
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Humeral immunity   immunity that is mediated by antibodies therefore can be transferred to and individual through non immune recipient by serum.  
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Cell-mediated immunity   any adaptive immune response in which antigen-specific effecter t cell dominate. It is defined operationally as all adaptive immunity that cannot be transferred to a naïve recipient with serum antibody  
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Antigen   originally defined as any molecule that binds specifically to an antibody, the term now also refers to any molecule that can produce peptides that bind specifically to a t cell receptor  
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Epitope   The portion of an antigenic molecule that is bound by an antibody or fives rise to the MHC-binding peptide that is recognized by a T-cell receptor. Aka antigenic determinant  
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Linear epitope   epitope of a protein recongnized by antibody that consists of a linear sequence of amino acids within the protein’s primary structure  
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Conformational epitope   epitopes on a protein antigen that are formed from several separate regions in the primary seuqience of a protein brought together by protein folsing. Antibodies that bind to conformational epitopes bind only to native forded proteins, aka Discontinous  
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Isotype   Classes of Immunoglobulin – Ig: M,G,D,A, and E; each has a distinct heavey-chain constant region encode by a different constant-region gene. The heavy-chain constant region determines the effecter properties of each antibody class  
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CDR(complimentary determining regions)   the localized regions of the immunoglobulin and T-cell receptor chains that determine the antigenic specificity and bind to the antigen. The CDR are the most variable parts of the variable domains, AKA hypervariable regions  
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Fc   A fragment of an antibody, resulting from the proteolytic cleavage, that consists of the carboxyl-terminal hlave sof the two heavy chains disulfide-bonded to each other by the residual hinge readily region. It is called Fc because it was the fragment that  
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Fab   a proteolytic fragment of IgG that consists of the light chains and the amino-terminal half of the heavy chain held together by and interchain disulfide bond. It is called Fab because it is the Fragment with antigen binding specifity.  
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F(ab’)2   a proteolytic fragment of IgG that consists of the two Fab arms held together by a disulfide bond. It is produced by digesting IgG with Pepsin  
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Immunoglobulin superfamily   the names given to all the proteins that contain one or more immunoglobulin or immunoglobulin like domains.  
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Affinity   A state of hypersensitivity to a normally innocuous environmental antigen. It results from the interaction between the antigen and antibodies or T cells produced by earlier exposure to the same antigen.  
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Avidity   copious amounts of receptors holds on to surface  
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Monoclonal antibodies   antibodies produced by a single clone of B-lymphocytes and that are therefore identical in structure and antigen specificity  
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Polyclonal   antibodies produced by many different B-lymphocytes that all are specific to different epitopes on the antigen.  
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Germline   the organization of the immunoglobulin and T-cell receptor genes in the dnA of the Germ cells and in the vast majority of somatic cells that do not undergo somatic recombination  
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RAG-1, RAG-2(recombination activation genes)   two genes whose expression is required for Ig and t cell receptor gene rearrangement in b and t cells  
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Junctional diversity   diversity present in the immunoglulin and T-cell receptor polypeptides that is created during the process of the gene rearrangement by the addition of nucleotides into the junctions between gene segments  
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Naïve B cell   a mature b cell that has left the bone marroe but has not yet encountered its specific antigen  
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Allelic exclusion   in reference to antibody production, the cast that, in a heterozygous individual, only one of the two c-region alleles at the Ig heavy-chain or light-chain loci is expressed in each be cell. In the b cell population, for each locus roughly half of the cel  
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Isotype switching   the process by which a b cell changes the class of Ig made while preserving the antigenic specificity of the Ig. Isotype switching involes somatic recombination that attaches a different heavy-chain constant-region gene to the variable-region exon.  
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Somatic hypermutation   mutation that occurs at high frequency in the rearranged variable-region DNA of the Ig genes in activated B cells, resulting in the production of variant Ab, some of which that have a higher affinity for the Ag  
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Affinity maturation   the increase in affinity of the antigen-binding sites of antibodies for the antigen that occurs during the course of an adaptive immune response.  
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Neutralizing antibody   binding to sites on pathogens that prevent growth, and entry into cells, Toxins also can be bound  
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Opsonin   antibodies and complement components that bind to pathogens and facilitate their phagocytosis by neutrophil or macrophages  
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Major histocompatibility complex (MHC)   a cluster of genes on the short arm of human chromosome 6 that encodes a set of polymorphic membrane glycoproteins called the MHC molecules, which are involved in presenting peptide antigens to T Cells  
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CD3 complex   A complex of signaling molecules that associates with T-cell receptors; it consists of CD3 gamma, Delta and epsilon chains and Zeta chains  
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T cell receptor (TCR)   the highly variable antigen receptor of T lymphocytes; on most T cells it is composed of a variable alpha and beta chain  
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TCR complex   the complex of T-cell receptor alpha and beta chains and the incariant CD3 and zeta chains that makes up a functional antigen receptor on the T-cell surface  
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Antigen presentation   the display of antigen as peptide fragments bound to MHC molecules on he surface of cells. This the form in which antigen is recognized b most T cells  
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CD4   a cell-surface glycoprotein on some T cells that recognize antigens presented by MHC class II molecules, CD4 binds to MHC class II molecules on the Antigen presenting cell and acts as a co-receptor to augment the T cells response  
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CD8   a cell-surface glycoprotein on some T cells that recognize antigens presented by MHC class 1 molecules; CD8 binds to MHC class 1 molecules on the Antigen-presenting cell and act as a co-receptor to augment the T-Cell’s response to antigen.  
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TH1   a subset of CD4 T cells that are characterized by cytokines they produce; they are involved mainly in activating macrophages, AKA inflammatory T cells  
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TH2   a subset of CD4 T cells that are characterized by cytokines they produce; they are mainly involved in stimulating B cells to produce Ab, AKA helper T cell  
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Co-receptor   a cell surface protein that increases the sensitivity of an antigen receptor to its antigen; a co receptor can accomplish this by increasing adhesive interactions between the interacting cells, and/or by enhancing signal transduction from the main recepto  
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Β-2 microglobulin   the invariant polypeptide that is common to all MHC class I molecules; AKA light chain of the MHC class I molecules  
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Degenerate binding specificity   the type of antigen-binding specificity exhibited by MHC I and II molecules, in which each MHC allotype can bind numerous peptides of different amino acid sequences  
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Proteasome   Large multisubunit protease present in the cytosol of all cells that degrades cytoplasmic proteins; it generates the peptides presented by MHC class I molecules  
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TAP (transporter associated protein)   an ATP binding protein in the ER that transports peptides from the cytosol to the ER lumen; it is made of TAP-1 and TAP-2. It supplies MHC I molecules with peptides  
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Chaperone   a protein that helps hold the conformation and guide the proteins they are assisting  
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Invariant chain(Ii)   polypeptide that associates with MHC class II proteins in the ER and prevents them from binding peptides there; it guides the MHC II molecules to endosomes where Ii is degraded, enabling MHC II molecules to bind to peptide spresent in the endosomes  
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Endocytosis   the uptake of extracellular material into cells by endo-cytic vesicles that form by pinching off pieces of the plasma membrane  
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Phagosome   intracellular vesicle containing material taken up by phagocytosis  
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Phagolysosome   intracellular vesicle formed by fusion of a phagosome with a lysosome, in which the phagocytosed material is broken down by degradative lysosomal enzymes  
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CLIP   is the degraded from of Ii; blocks the binding of peptides in the vesicle to MHC II, is released by HLA-DM  
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Human leukocyte antigen (HLA)   the human MHC  
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Polymorphism   the existence of different variants of a gene or trait in the population. Genetic polymorphism is defined as the existence of two or more forms (alleles) of a given gene within the population, with the variant alleles each occurring at a frequency greater  
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Allele   natural variants of a single gene  
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Haplotype   in respect of a linked cluster of polymorphic genes, the set of alleles carried on a single chromosome is called haplotype; every person inherits two haplotypes, one from each parent; the gene was first used in connection with the MHC complex  
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MHC restriction   the fact that a given T-cell receptor will recognize its peptide antigen only when bound to a particular form of MHC molecule  
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Peptide binding motif   of an MHC isoform, the combination of anchor residues that are common to the amino-acid sequences of the peptides that bind to the isoform  
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Balancing selection   type of evolutionary selection that acts to maintain a variety of phenotypes in a pop  
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Directional selection   type of natural selection that replaces older alleles with newer variants; its characteristics outcome is change  
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Allogeneic/alloreactivity   describes two members of the same species who are genetically different; an adaptive immune response made by one member of a species against an allogenic antigen from another member of the same species  
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