Immuno 1: Response to immune infection Flashcards

1
Q

What are the different aspects of immune protection?

A

Anatomical barriers - skin, oral mucosa, resp epithelium, intestine

Complement

Innate immunity (macrophages, granulocyte and NK cells)

Adaptive immunity (B, T cell)

NB - this decreases in speed but increases in specificity and memory as you go down these layers

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2
Q

What are the different components of the innate immune response and what is involved in these?

A

Cellular component:

  • Polymorphic cells - neutrophils, eosinophils and basophils (From BM)
  • Monocytes + macrophages (From BM)
  • NK cells
  • Dendritic cells

Soluble component:

  • Complement
  • Acute phase proteins
  • Cytokines and chemokines
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3
Q

What do polymorphic cells in the innate immune response use to recognise immune complexes and attach to them?

A

The Fc component

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4
Q

Difference between macrophages and neutrophils?

A

Macrophages = resident cells stay within a tissue

Neutrophils = Mobile and will move to sites of acute inflammation

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5
Q

Describe the process of phagocytosis

A

Pathogen taken into phagosome

Phagosome fuses with lysosome ->phagolysosome

Here you can get oxidative / non-oxidative killing

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6
Q

Describe how oxidative killing occurs in phagocytosis?

A

Oxidative killing via reactive oxygen species produced by NADPH oxidase and myeloperoxidase

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7
Q

Describe how non-oxidative killing occurs in phagocytosis?

A

Non-oxidative killing – lysozymes and lactoferrin

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8
Q

What happens at the end of phagocytosis?

A

Phagocytosis depletes neutrophil glycogen reserves –> cell death –> enzyme release –> pus formation

Macrophages persist and present antigens to T cells - e.g. the IL-12-IGNγ pathway

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9
Q

What are NK cells?

A

These are cytotoxic lymphocytes that are part of the innate immune response

Have inhibitory receptors for self-HLA
Have activating receptors for heparan sulfate proteoglyclans (found basically everywhere in the body)

Hence this is a equilibirum that gets shifted in altered self-cells that dont display self-HLA hence get killed

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10
Q

What are the functions of NK cells?

A

Kill ‘altered self’ cells – malignant or virus infected

Secrete cytokines to regulate inflammation

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11
Q

What are complements?

A

There are a combination of 20+ proteins produced by the liver and are involved in the innate immune system

(can be low in people w/ liver failure)

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12
Q

What are the different complement pathways and what are they activated by? what happens after activation?

A

Classical pathway (C1, C2, C4) - Ag-Ab complexes (MAIN)

Mannose binding lectin / MBL pathway (C2, C4) - Bacterial cell wall

Alternative pathway (directly onto C3) - Microbiol cell surface carbs (MAIN)

Converge on C3 convertase which activates final common pathway (C5-9)

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13
Q

What do dendritic cells do?

A
  • Present processed antigen to T cells in lymph nodes to prime the adaptive immune response
  • Dendritic cells travel to LN via lymphatics
  • Ag from infection reach LN via lymphatics
  • Lymphocytes return to blood via thoracic duct and enter LN from blood
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14
Q

What does the adaptive immune response involve?

A

Cells component:

  • B lymphocytes + antibody = Humoral immunity
  • T lymphocytes (CD4, CD8) = Cellular immunity

Soluble components:
- Cytokines + Chemokines

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15
Q

What organs are involved in the adaptive immune response?

A
Primary lymphoid organs 
(Development + maturation)
- Hematopoietic stem cells (B &T cells)
- Thymus (T cell maturation)
- BM (B cell maturation)
Secondary lymphoid organs 
(Where immune response occurs)
- Spleen
- Lymph nodes
- Mucosal associated lymphoid tissue
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16
Q

Describe the process of lymphoid development

A

Arise from haematopoetic stem cells

T cells:
• Exported as immature T cells to the thymus where undergo selection
• Mature T lymphocytes enter the circulation and reside in secondary lymphoid organs

B cells:
• Exported as IgM B cells these can undergo isotype switching OR
• Become mature IgM plasma cells

17
Q

Describe how T cell selection works? (1/2)

A

This depends on the T cell’s affinity for HLA

  • Low affinity for HLA = not selected due to lack of reactivity (can’t protect v infection)
  • Intermediate affinity for HLA = POSITIVE SELECTION (10% of original cells)
  • High affinity for HLA = NEGATIVE SELECTION to avoid autoreactivity (ie AI conditions)
18
Q

Describe how T cell selection works (2/2)

What applies to all T cells?

A

T cells with intermediate affinity for HLA I –> differentiate as CD8+ T cells

T cells with intermediate affinity for HLA II –> differentiate as CD4+ T cells

NB - all T cells are CD3+

19
Q

How are the HLA classes named?

A

HLA I normally has 1 letter after it

HLA II normally has 2 letters after it (eg HLA-DR27)

20
Q

What is the 1st stage in B cell selection

A

This is when they mature and develop in the BM:

  • No recognition of self in BM = Survive
  • Recognise of self in BM = negative selection to avoid autoreactivity
21
Q

What are the two phases of the B cell response?

A
  1. T cell independent i.e. no T cell help – produce only IgM (Usually acute infection) -> IgM secreting plasma cell
  2. T cell dependent i.e. T cell help allows isotype switching to produce IgG and IgA (Germinal centre reaction)
22
Q

Describe the T cell dependent aspect of the B cell response

A
  1. Dendritic cells prime CD4+ T cells
  2. CD4+ T cell help for B cell differentiation
    Requires CD40L:CD40
  3. B cell proliferation
    Somatic hypermutation
    Isotype switching to IgG, A , E
23
Q

What do CD4+ T cells do?

A

CD4+ T helper cells – cytokines encourage development along different lines

TGFβ stimulates development into Treg cells – CD25+ and Foxp3+

24
Q

What do CD8+ T cells do?

A

CD8+ cytotoxic T cells

  • Directly cytotoxic through perforin, granzymes and expression of Fas ligands
  • Indirectly cytotoxic through cytokine secretion
25
Q

What can happen when B cells get engaged by antigens?

A

Develop as IgM plasma cells​

Undergo germinal centre reaction (somatic hypermutation and class switching) to produce IgG, IgE or IgA​

26
Q

What are IgG, IgA and IgM as types of molecules?

A

IgG is a monomer, IgA is a dimer and IgM is a pentamer

27
Q

Which cells mastermind the transition from innate to adaptive immunity?

Macrophage
Complement
T helper cells
Dendritic cells
Memory B cells
A

Dendritic cells