Autoimmunity Flashcards

1
Q

Autoimmune response?

A

Response to one or more self antigens in absence of self tolerance, triggering normal immune responses
Because self antigens can’t be cleared, the response is chronic

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2
Q

AD stats?

A

Affect 5-8% of pop
More than 80 types, varied symptoms, targeting many different tissues
Chronic
Rheumatoid arthritis is one of the most common

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3
Q

Classifying ADs?

A

Organ specific e.g. myelin sheath in CNS axons in MS
OR
Systemic - affects multiple tissues where antigens are widespread

Autoimmune haemolytic anaemia can be organ specific, or systemic if combined with SLE

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4
Q

Immunological features of ADs

A

Autoreactive CD4+ Th cells
Auto-antibodies
Cellular infiltrate where T and B cells congregate

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5
Q

Pathologies of AD?

A

Primary - direct immune action e.g. Hashimoto’s - destruction of thyroid organ
Secondary - consequences of primary i.e. Hashimoto’s is hypothyroidism

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6
Q

Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis?

A

EAE studied in mice to give model for MS, via T cell disease mechanisms
Mediated by Th17 and Th1 specific for MBP, as transferral of these to a healthy animal induces the disease - therefore cell driven

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7
Q

T cell mediated disease mechanisms?

A
Th17/1/2
Proinflammatory cytokines
Damage epithelial barrier
CD8 cytotoxic action
Macrophages
Inflammatory response
Antibody responses
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8
Q

Complement mediated lysis?

A

e.g. autoimmune haemolytic anaemia

Anti-rbc auto-antibodies binds rbs, fix complement, and generate lysis

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9
Q

Opsonisation and phagocytic removal?

A

e.g. autoimmune thrombocytopenia
Anti-platelet auto antibodies bind platelets
Acts as opsonin -phagocytosis (macrophages bind with FcR)

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10
Q

Alteration of function diseases?

A

Graves Disease - stimulate receptors with agonists
TSH receptor auto antibodies = thyroid hormone overproduction

Myasthenia Gravis - inhibition of function
Auto antibodies block Ach binding/internalise sodium channels so no muscle contraction

Pernicious anaemia - blocking function
Intrinsic factor auto-antibodies block B12 absorption

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11
Q

Deposition of immune complexes?

A

Systemic lupus erythematosus

Deposit in small blood vessel walls throughout body - inflammatory response giving varied symptoms

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12
Q

Examples of tolerance failures?

A

AIRE and FOXP3 mutations

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13
Q

Concordance/genetic basis to AD

A

Twin studies - greater in identical, less than 50%, so both
Most ADs are multigenic, which several contributors
Many of those genes are polymorphic

NOT due to mutations - due to polymorphisms, expressing different alleles

Several genes add up

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14
Q

Relative risk?

A

Extent to which an allele increases susceptibility

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15
Q

What do genetic factors affect?

A
Autoantigen availability and clearance e.g. MHCII
(about 50% of risk)
Apoptosis
Signalling thresholds
Cytokine expression/signalling
Tregs
Sex - often X linked
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16
Q

Role of environment in ADs?

A

Microbial agents i.e. pathogens may resemble self-antigens
Vitamin D (suppress Th17)
Drugs - bind self to make it seem foreign
Toxins
Microbiota/hygiene e.g. microbiome, lack of exposure

Infections - Epstein Barr virus interacts with gene loci associated with AD

17
Q

Loss of self-tolerance mechanisms?

A

Bypassing T helpers

Tolerance loss

18
Q

Bypassing Ths?

A

B cells mitogens stimulate auto-antibody production
e.g. bacterial products like LPS can stimulate plasma differentiation
Not antigen specific - any B cell
Transient - lost when mitogen leaves

19
Q

Tolerance loss?

A

Where pathogens and self antigens are similar: With microbe, B cells that can act on self are stimulated with T help, as the shared novel epitope recruits them
e.g. rheumatic fever

OR
Drug induced/chemical induced changes:
Drug/chemical binds self-antigen and modifies it to give a foreign T cell epitope
Should be transient with presence of drug, but may become chronic in susceptible individuals: positive feedback loop with non-clearance of self-antigens, epitope spreading = broader response