The Immune System

    Subdecks (2)

    Cards (100)

    • What do foreign antigens trigger?
      An immune response
    • What does each type of cell have on it?
      Molecules (including proteins) on its surface that identify that cell
    • what do the molecules/proteins on the surface of cells enable the immune system to identify?
      Pathogens, Cells from other organisms of the same species, Abnormal body cells, Toxins
    • What is an antigen?
      A protein that can generate an immune response when detected by the body
    • Where are antigens usually found?
      On the surface of the cells
    • What does the BODY USE ANTIGENS to IDENTIFY?
      Pathogens
      abnormal body cells
      toxins
      cells from other individuals of the same species
    • what are pathogens?
      Microorganisms that cause disease
    • Give examples of abnormal body cells?
      Cancerous or pathogen-infected body cells- which have abnormal antigens on their surface
    • Give an example of a cell from other individuals of the same species which antigens would identify?
      Organ transplants
    • What is a phagocyte aaka?
      macrophage
    • What is a phagocyte?
      A type of white blood cell that carries out phagocytosis
    • What is phagocytosis?
      Engulfment of pathogens
    • Where are phagocytes found?
      In the blood and in tissues
    • What are phagocytes the first cells to do?
      Respond to an immune system trigger in the body
    • What do phagocytes do?
      Engulf pathogens
    • How do phagocytes destroy a pathogen found in the blood-answer found from AQA mark scheme ?
      1. Engulfs the pathogen
      2. Forming vesicle and fuses with lysosome
      3. Enzymes digest/hydrolyse
    • What is a T-cell aka?
      T-lymphocyte
    • What cells do phagocytes activate?
      T-cells
    • What is a T-cell a type of?
      White blood cell
    • What do T-cells have?
      Receptor proteins on its surface
    • What do the receptor proteins on the surface of T-cells do?
      Bind to complementary antigens presented to it by phagocytes. This ACTIVATES the T-cell
    • What are the different types of T-cells?
      Helper T-cells
      Cytotoxic T-cells
      These respond in DIFFERENT WAYS
    • How do helper T-cells respond?
      Release chemical signals that activate and stimulate phagocytes
    • How do Cytotoxic T-cells respond?
      Kill abnormal and foreign cells
    • What do helper T-cells also do?
      activate B-cells
    • What do B-cells do?
      Secrete antibodies
    • T-cells activate what?
      B-cells
    • What are B-cells aka?
      B-lymphocytes
    • What are B-cells a type of?
      white blood cell
    • What are B-cells covered with?
      ANTIBODIES
    • What are antibodies?

      Proteins that bind antigens to form an antigen-antibody complex
    • What does each B-cell have?
      A different shaped antibody in its membrane, so different ones bind to different shaped antigens
    • Why are antibodies important with the stimulation of phagocytosis (aqa q and answer)?
      Bind to antigen/are markers
      Antibodies use clumping/AGGLUTINATION
    • How do B-cells work?
      1. When the antibody on the surface of a B-cell meets a complementary shaped antigen, it binds to it
      2. This, together with the substances released from helper T-cells, activates the B-cell. This process = CLONAL SELECTION
      3. The activated B-cell divides into PLASMA CELLS
    • What do plasma cells do?
      make more antibodies to a specific antigen
    • What are identical?
      plasma cells and B-cells (the plasma cells are clones of the B-cell)
    • What do plasma cells do?
      Secrete lots of antibodies specific to the antigen
      = monoclonal antibodies
    • What do the antibodies secreted by plasma cells do?
      Bind to the antigens on the surface of the pathogen to form many antigen-antibody complexes
    • How does agglutination occur?
      • Antibodies have 2 binding sites so can bind to two pathogens at the same time
      • = Pathogens become clumped together = agglutination
    • What happens after agglutination by the antibodies?
      Phagocytes bind to the agglutination and then they bind to the antibodies and phagocytose MANY pathogens at once.
      = the process leads to the destruction of pathogens carrying this antigen in the body