What is a pathogen?
A harmful microorganism that causes a disease
What is an antibody?
A protein produced by white blood cells (plasma cells) against specific antigens
What is an antigen?
A protein marker on a pathogen that initiates an immune response and the production of antibodies
What is a lymphocyte?
A white blood cell that produces antibodies or antitoxins
What are non specific defence mechanisms?
Response is immediate and the same for all pathogens
What are specific defence mechanisms?
Response is slower and specific to each pathogen
Why are antigens important?
white blood cells must be able to distinguish the body’s own cells from those that are foreign. If they could not do this, the lymphocytes would destroy the organisms own tissues
What is the structure of an antibody?
Quaternary structure - 2 ‘light chains’ held together by disulphide bridges, 2 longer ‘heavy chains.
‘Variable regions’ containing an antigen-binding site - have a specific tertiary structure complementary to a specific antigen
The rest of the antibody is the ‘constant region’ - same in all antibodies
Describe the process of phagocytosis
Where do B lymphocytes mature and what do they do?
Mature in the bone marrow
Where do T lymphocytes mature and what do they do?
Mature in the thymus gland
Where is lymph contained in the body?
lymph vessels and lymph glands
What are antigen presenting cells?
A type of phagocyte that has engulfed a pathogen and is now presenting antigens from the destroyed pathogen on its surface.
How do T cells respond to foreign antibodies?
How do B cells respond to foreign antibodies?
How do antibodies lead to the destruction of pathogens?
Formation of antigen-antibody complex which results in agglutination - a mass of pathogens surrounded by antibodies forming a large mass. This makes it easier for a phagocyte to locate and ingest because they release more chemicals
What are monoclonal antibodies?
antibodies produced from 1 hybridoma cell that has been cloned by clonal expansion
What are monoclonal antibodies used for?
Contrast the primary and secondary immune response
What causes antigen variability?
How are monoclonal antibodies produced?
antibody producing lymphocytes in mice are fused with tumour cells from humans (hybridoma) to rapidly reproduce, to produce large quantities of monoclonal antibodies
Contrast passive and active immunity
Passive:
- no memory cells produced
- immediate
- antibodies from external source
Active:
- memory cells produced
- time lag
- lymphocytes produce antibodies
What are the types of vaccination?
How do vaccinations prevent you from developing a disease?