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Vaccination ppt
Vaccination ppt

... • Adaptive immunity may be classified based on the host’s role in developing the adaptive specific immunity.  Active immunity is generated when an immunocompetent host is exposed to the foreign challenge and the host’s native immune cells respond by generating specific immune products.  Passive im ...
Specialized Cells
Specialized Cells

Viruses
Viruses

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... cytoskeleton proteins, are some of the most conserved eukaryotic proteins being expressed in mammals and birds. The actin protein consists of six isoforms, varying in their amino acid sequence, but all having the same molecular mass of 42 kD. The isoforms show more than 90% overall sequence homology ...
Anti-Alpha Smooth Muscle Actin Antibody (Previously Covance
Anti-Alpha Smooth Muscle Actin Antibody (Previously Covance

... cytoskeleton proteins, are some of the most conserved eukaryotic proteins being expressed in mammals and birds. The actin protein consists of six isoforms, varying in their amino acid sequence, but all having the same molecular mass of 42 kD. The isoforms show more than 90% overall sequence homology ...
Cells and Organs of Immune System Chpt. 2
Cells and Organs of Immune System Chpt. 2

... B-cells, T-cells and Null cells (NK cells) 20-40% of body’s leukocytes 99% of lymph node If inactivated said to be naïve Nucleus occupies almost entire cell 6 m diameter ...
Flashcard Vocabulary for Immune and Nervous Systems
Flashcard Vocabulary for Immune and Nervous Systems

... Flashcard Vocabulary for Immune and Nervous Systems Antibodies – chemical made by lymphocytes (T-cells and B-cells) that help the body kill pathogens Antigens – A substance on the outside of a pathogen that helps the WBCs recognize what it is. Autoimmune Disease – A disease where the immune system a ...
The immune system protects the body from disease.
The immune system protects the body from disease.

... VDJ recombination is the process by which V, D, and J genes are randomly selected and combined to form the heavy and light chains that make ...
Chapter 19, Section 2 The Body’s Defenses
Chapter 19, Section 2 The Body’s Defenses

... • HIV spreads from one person to another only if body fluids from an infected person come in contact with an uninfected person. – Sexual contact, sharing needles, in utero, transfusion are examples. ...
The Medical Importance of the Immune System
The Medical Importance of the Immune System

... birds and mammals) • Must be induced to be active against infections or tumors ...
The life of a B cell - Blueprint Epigenome
The life of a B cell - Blueprint Epigenome

... isolated B cells at each stage of their development to follow the epigenetic changes that mark each phase of their lives. The results have been published online in the June 8 edition of Nature Genetics. The researchers not only define the precise molecular changes during B cell development but provi ...
Organs and Tissues of the Immune System
Organs and Tissues of the Immune System

... Macrophage (“big eater”) ...
Lab Dx Day 1 Intro to Hematopoietic System
Lab Dx Day 1 Intro to Hematopoietic System

... The third class of proteins in immune system (B and T cells and MHC) MHC - found on all cell surfaces T cells require recognition of both antigen and a self MHC protein ...
Types of Passive Transport
Types of Passive Transport

... What must cells take in to survive? ________________________________________________________ What part of the cell allows it to take in nutrients and water? ____________________________________ Does it have another name? What is the cell membrane made of? ____________________________________________ ...
Health, Gnotobiology and Infectious Diseases
Health, Gnotobiology and Infectious Diseases

... The Adaptive Immune Response • Memory – Ability to “remember” a previous encounter with an antigen – “Secondary” response is typically induced more quickly and is considerably more vigorous than the “primary” response – Immunological memory can be exploited by vaccination • Self/nonself recognition ...
Types of Passive Transport
Types of Passive Transport

... Cellular Transport PPT notes What must cells take in to survive? What part of the cell allows it to take in nutrients and water? Does it have another name? What is the cell membrane made of? What is the process for cells to move substances through the cell membrane? Two Types of Transport ...
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... Cellular Transport PPT notes What must cells take in to survive? What part of the cell allows it to take in nutrients and water? Does it have another name? What is the cell membrane made of? What is the process for cells to move substances through the cell membrane? Two Types of Transport ...
Rheumatoid arthritis and myasthenia gravis as examples of
Rheumatoid arthritis and myasthenia gravis as examples of

... This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Thesis/Dissertation Collections at RIT Scholar Works. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses by an authorized administrator of RIT Scholar Works. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ...
Chapter 17 Specific Immune System Specific Immune Response
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... • Artificially acquired passive immunity – Injection of Ab/Immediate but short-lived ...
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Ch 14 Lymphatic System

... AUTOIMMUNITY Occurs when the immune system fails to differentiate between self and non-self thus making antibodies to it’s own cells Ex: type I diabetes mellitus, rheumatoid arthritis, systematic lupus erythematosus Why would the body do such a thing? - A virus while replicating “borrowed” proteins ...
Chemical Principles
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... part of bacterial cell wall part of DNA and RNA (deoxyribose and ribose) ...
Flow Cytometry Overview - Molecular Medicine Ireland
Flow Cytometry Overview - Molecular Medicine Ireland

... simultaneously for each cell. Fluorescent probes are used to report the quantities of specific components of the cells. Fluorescent antibodies are often used to report the densities of specific surface receptors, and thus to distinguish subpopulations of differentiated cell types, including cells ex ...
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Peripheral CD4+ T cell differentiation

... • In vitro cytokines that drive differentiation initiate signalling cascades that are selfreinforcing • Reciprocally, these inhibit other pathways of differentiation • Through specific transcription factors, the expression of several hundred genes is affected ...
5 Active Transport,endoandexocytosis
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... • The cell envelops bacteria and other large particles and then internalizes them. ...
Antibody Secreting Cells
Antibody Secreting Cells

... sites of lymphocyte activation by antigen, and lymphocytes recirculate between the blood and these organs until they encounter antigen. ...
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Polyclonal B cell response



Polyclonal B cell response is a natural mode of immune response exhibited by the adaptive immune system of mammals. It ensures that a single antigen is recognized and attacked through its overlapping parts, called epitopes, by multiple clones of B cell.In the course of normal immune response, parts of pathogens (e.g. bacteria) are recognized by the immune system as foreign (non-self), and eliminated or effectively neutralized to reduce their potential damage. Such a recognizable substance is called an antigen. The immune system may respond in multiple ways to an antigen; a key feature of this response is the production of antibodies by B cells (or B lymphocytes) involving an arm of the immune system known as humoral immunity. The antibodies are soluble and do not require direct cell-to-cell contact between the pathogen and the B-cell to function.Antigens can be large and complex substances, and any single antibody can only bind to a small, specific area on the antigen. Consequently, an effective immune response often involves the production of many different antibodies by many different B cells against the same antigen. Hence the term ""polyclonal"", which derives from the words poly, meaning many, and clones (""Klon""=Greek for sprout or twig); a clone is a group of cells arising from a common ""mother"" cell. The antibodies thus produced in a polyclonal response are known as polyclonal antibodies. The heterogeneous polyclonal antibodies are distinct from monoclonal antibody molecules, which are identical and react against a single epitope only, i.e., are more specific.Although the polyclonal response confers advantages on the immune system, in particular, greater probability of reacting against pathogens, it also increases chances of developing certain autoimmune diseases resulting from the reaction of the immune system against native molecules produced within the host.
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