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Ch. 17 - Adaptive Immunity: Specific Defenses of the Host
Tortora - Microbiology: An Introduction 14th Edition
Tortora14th EditionMicrobiology: An IntroductionISBN: 9780138200398Not the one you use?Change textbook
Chapter 17, Problem 7

How would each of the following prevent infection?
a. Antibodies against Neisseria gonorrhoeae fimbriae
b. Antibodies against host cell mannose

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1
Step 1: Understand the role of fimbriae in Neisseria gonorrhoeae infection. Fimbriae are hair-like appendages that help the bacteria attach to host cells, which is a critical first step in establishing infection.
Step 2: Explain how antibodies against Neisseria gonorrhoeae fimbriae would prevent infection. These antibodies would bind to the fimbriae, blocking the bacteria's ability to adhere to host cells, thereby preventing colonization and subsequent infection.
Step 3: Recognize that mannose residues on host cells serve as binding sites for certain bacterial adhesins, facilitating bacterial attachment and invasion.
Step 4: Describe how antibodies against host cell mannose would prevent infection. These antibodies would bind to the mannose residues on host cells, masking the binding sites and preventing bacteria that rely on mannose recognition from attaching effectively.
Step 5: Summarize that both types of antibodies interfere with the critical initial step of bacterial adhesion, which is essential for infection establishment, thus preventing the bacteria from colonizing and causing disease.

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Key Concepts

Here are the essential concepts you must grasp in order to answer the question correctly.

Role of Fimbriae in Bacterial Infection

Fimbriae are hair-like appendages on bacteria like Neisseria gonorrhoeae that enable attachment to host cells, a critical first step in infection. By binding to specific receptors on host tissues, fimbriae facilitate colonization and invasion. Preventing this attachment can block infection initiation.
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Fimbriae & Hami

Function of Antibodies in Immune Defense

Antibodies are proteins produced by the immune system that specifically recognize and bind to antigens, such as bacterial fimbriae or host molecules. This binding can neutralize pathogens, block their adhesion, or mark them for destruction by immune cells, thereby preventing infection.
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Host Cell Mannose and Bacterial Adhesion

Mannose residues on host cell surfaces serve as binding sites for certain bacterial adhesins. Antibodies against host cell mannose could block these sites, preventing bacteria from attaching and invading. However, targeting host molecules risks autoimmunity or tissue damage.
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2) Adhesion to Host