Innate immune system
Innate immune system barriers - microbial
Innate immune system barriers - Physical
Innate immune system barriers - chemical
Innate immune system - Cells
Innate immune system - Processes
Innate immune cells capable of phagocytosis
Phagocytosis step 1
Pseudopodia surround microbes
Phagocytosis step 2
Microbes are engulfed into the cell
Phagocytosis step 3
Vacuoles containing microbes form
Phagocytosis step 4
Vacuoles and lysosomes fuse
Phagocytosis step 5
Toxic compounds and lysosomal enzymes destroy microbes
Phagocytosis step 6
Microbial debris is released by exocytosis
What is opsonization?
When phagocytosis is improved by coating a bacterium with opsonins like antibodies or complement proteins in blood plasma
How do antibodies act as opsonins?
Antibodies bound to a bacterium are recognized by the Fc receptor on a phagocytic cell
How does the complement system help in opsonization?
C3b coats the pathogen and binds to C3b receptors on phagocytes, helping them attach and engulf the microbe
What happens once a bacterium is coated with opsonins?
The bacterium is bound, engulfed, and destroyed by the phagocyte, improving pathogen clearance
What are complement proteins and how are they activated?
What are the three complement activation pathways?
What does C3 activation lead to?
What type of pathogen is the MAC most effective against?
What do Natural Killer (NK) cells do?
How do NK cells target cells?