Immune System: Key Concepts and Cell Types for Biology Students

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34 Terms

1
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What is the main function of the immune system?

To protect the body from infectious agents (bacteria, viruses, fungi, parasites) and harmful substances.

2
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What are the three main categories of leukocytes?

Granulocytes, monocytes, and lymphocytes.

3
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Which granulocyte is the first responder to bacterial infections?

Neutrophils.

4
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Which granulocyte specializes in parasite destruction and allergies?

Eosinophils.

5
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Which granulocyte releases histamine and promotes inflammation?

Basophils.

6
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What do monocytes become when they leave the blood?

Macrophages and dendritic cells.

7
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What are the three main types of lymphocytes?

T cells, B cells, and Natural Killer (NK) cells.

8
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What are cytokines?

Small protein messengers that regulate immune system activity.

9
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Which cytokine fights viruses by warning neighboring cells?

Interferons (IFNs).

10
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Is innate immunity specific or non-specific?

Non-specific.

11
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Does innate immunity have memory?

No.

12
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What are the physical barriers in the first line of defense?

Skin and mucous membranes.

13
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Which cells perform phagocytosis?

Neutrophils, macrophages, dendritic cells.

14
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What do NK cells do?

Trigger apoptosis (programmed cell death) in abnormal cells.

15
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What does the complement system do?

A cascade of proteins that ends in cytolysis (cell bursting).

16
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What are the 5 cardinal signs of inflammation?

Redness, heat, swelling, pain, loss of function.

17
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What are benefits of fever?

Increases metabolism, promotes interferon activity, slows microbial growth, speeds repair.

18
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Is adaptive immunity specific or non-specific?

Specific.

19
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Does adaptive immunity have memory?

Yes.

20
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What is an antigen?

A substance recognized as foreign by the immune system.

21
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Which cells provide humoral immunity?

B cells (antibodies).

22
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Which cells provide cell-mediated immunity?

T cells.

23
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What do helper T cells (CD4) do?

Release cytokines, activate B cells, and activate cytotoxic T cells.

24
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What do cytotoxic T cells (CD8) do?

Kill infected or abnormal cells using perforin and granzymes.

25
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What do antibodies do?

Bind antigens and promote destruction by neutralization, agglutination, opsonization, and complement activation.

26
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Which antibody is most abundant and versatile?

IgG.

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Which antibody is first produced and good at agglutination?

IgM.

28
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Which antibody is secreted in mucus, tears, saliva, and breastmilk?

IgA.

29
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Which antibody helps activate B cells?

IgD.

30
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Which antibody is involved in allergies and parasite defense?

IgE.

31
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What is the difference between primary and secondary immune response?

Primary is slow and weak (first exposure); secondary is faster and stronger due to memory cells.

32
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What is pus made of?

Dead leukocytes, pathogens, and cellular debris.

33
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What causes allergies?

Immune overreaction to harmless substances (allergens).

34
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Which virus infects Helper T cells and causes AIDS?

HIV

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