Ch 4: Autoimmune Rubin's Flashcards

These cards are directly from the Rubin’s textbook.

1
Q

What is central tolerance?

A

Self reactive T and B lymphocytes deleted during their maturation in thymus/bone marrow

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2
Q

What is negative selection?

A

In thymus: self reactive T-cell recognize self-peptides (with compatible self MHC) and are induced to undergo apoptosis
Occurs after + selection (self-MHC restriction)
In bone marrow: called clonal deletion for B-cells

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3
Q

What is peripheral tolerance?

A

Regulating T-cells that escape negative selection

held in check in periphery via anergy, suppression, and/or activation induced cell death

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4
Q

What is molecular mimicry? Give an example.

A

Helper T-cell tolerance is overcome via
Antibodies against foreign antigens that cross reacts with self-antigens.
NO AUTOANTIBODY MADE
Ex: rheumatic fever, anti-S.pyogenes antibody cross-reacts with antigens from cardiac muscle

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5
Q

What is a Type I hypersensitivity Response?

A

Immediate type hypersensitivity rxn

1) IgE binds its Fc domain to mast/basophil cells
2) Subsequent antigen binding = cxrlink IgE and degranulation of histamine etc.

urticaria, asthma, anaphylaxis

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6
Q

What is a Type II hypersensitivity Response?

A

1) IgM or IgG formed against antigen on fixed cell surface or EC antigen
2) Antigen-Ab coupling on fixed cell surface activates complement via the Ig Fc domain= cell lysis (cytotoxicity) or ECM damage (MAC, opsonization)

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7
Q

What is a Type III hypersensitivity Response?

A

1) IgM or IgG response
2) Antigen-Ab coupling in circulation = Immune complex formed in circulation
3) IC deposited in tissue
4) Complement activation at site of IC deposition = wbc recruitment = tissue injury

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8
Q

What is a Type IV hypersensitivity Response?

A

Cell-mediated/delayed type rxn
DOSEN’T INVOLVE Abs
Antigen activation of T-cell and macrophage recruitment = release products = tissue injury

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9
Q

What are the 5 THEORIES of the molecular pathogenesis of autoimmunity?

A

1) Inaccessible Self-Antigens
2) Abnormal T-cell fxn
3) Molecular mimicry
4) Polyclonal B-cell activation
5) Tissue Injury/Hypersensitivity Rxns

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10
Q

What is the idea behind inaccessible self-antigens causing autoimmune disease?

A

Intracellular antigens are not normally exposed
Tissue injury will expose them
Immune response develops

*pathogenic infrequently, remember no evidence that antisperm antibodies cause generalized injury, except for localized orchitis

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11
Q

What is the idea behind abnormal T-cell fxn causing autoimmune disease?

A

Defects in suppressor T-cells described in many autoimmune diseases

Helper T cells may become autoreactive in autoimmune disease (normal job: antigen-specific B-cell activation, T-cell tolerance induced by low doses of antigen then get cray cray autoreactive)

***Drug induced lupus = ex of DNA hypomethylation leads to upreg leukocyte antigen and B-cell activation independent of antigen
T cell autoreactivity and loss of antigen specificity

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12
Q

What is the idea behind polyclonal B cell activation causing autoimmune disease?

A

B-cells directly activated by bacterial cell walls/viruses (with complex and numerous antigenic sites)

Ex = post bacterial, viral, parasitic infections shown dev of Rheumatoid Factor (RA) and anti-DNA antibodies (SLE)

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13
Q

What is the prototypical systemic immune complex disease?

A

SLE

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14
Q

What does SLE characteristically affect?

A

skin, joints, serous membranes, kidneys

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15
Q

What are the two autoantibodies that are pathognomonic but not directly cytotoxic in SLE?

A

Types of anti-nuclear antibodies to:

1) Sm antigen
2) dsDNA

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16
Q

Who do we typically see with SLE?

A

common and severe in AAs/hispanics

over 80% of cases are in women of childbearing age (whatever the hell that means….stupid Rubin)

17
Q

What are some potential etiological factors in SLE?

A

virus (EBV)
hormones (estrogen)
genetic predispositions (HLA B8)
Drugs (procainamide, hydralazine, isoniazid)

18
Q

What is the pathogenesis of SLE?

A

1) potential etiological factors
2) loss of tolerance, acquired sensitivity to auto-antigens
3) Autoreactive CD4 T-cells
4) polyclonal B cell hyper-reactivity
5) Autoantibody production (anti-dsDNA ab)
6) Immune complex formation in circulation & tissues
7) Tissue injury: glomerulonephritis, vasculitis, serositis, arthritis

19
Q

How is joint disease (polyarthralgia) in SLE different from that in rheumatoid arthritis?

A

Joint destruction is unusual in SLE

20
Q

What is the prototypical skin involvement in SLE?

A

erythematous rash in sun-exposed sites
malar “butterfly” rash

perivascular lymphoid infiltrate & liquefactive degeneration of basal cells

Ig and complement deposition

21
Q

What is the prototypical renal disease seen in SLE?

A

glomerulonephritis (3/4 of SLE pts)

Immune complexes between DNA and IgG abs to dsDNA deposit in glomeruli

22
Q

What can be a consequence of serous membrane involvement in SLE? Resp system in SLE?

A

pleuritis and pleural effusion
less frequently: pericarditis, peritonitis

pneumonitis
progressive interstitial fibrosis
pulmonary hypertension

23
Q

What is the cardiac involvement in SLE?

A

commonly pericarditis (but all layers can be affected)

24
Q

What is Libman-Sacks endocarditis?

A

Associated with SLE
small nonbacterial vegetations on valve leaflets
diff from larger/bulkier bacterial endocarditis vegetations

25
Q

What is CNS involvement with SLE?

A

vasculitis&raquo_space; hemorrhage and infarction of brain

26
Q

What are antiphospholipid antibodies associated with in SLE?

A

1/3 pts

thromboembolic complications, Budd-Chiari, DVT, stroke, PE, spont abortions

27
Q

How is joint disease (polyarthralgia) in SLE different from that in rheumatoid arthritis?

A

Joint destruction is unusual in SLE

28
Q

What is primary Sjogren Syndrome?

A

intense lymphocytic infiltrates in salivary and lacrimal glands (CD4 T-cells)
leads to acini destruction&raquo_space; keratoconjunctivitis and xerostomia
w/o other CT disease

29
Q

What is secondary SS?

A

SS associated with other CT disease

30
Q

What are some clinical features of SS?

A

dry mouth, dry eyes, dysphagia w/GI tract involvement, lymphoid infiltration&raquo_space; atrophic gastritis

31
Q

Name the disease!
vasculopathy, excessive collagen deposition in skin and lungs (diffuse interstitial fibrosis)/GI tract/heart/kidneys (focal hemorrhage/cortical infarct), lesions in arteries/arterioles/capillaries, thickening and fibrosis of vessels

A

Scleroderma

32
Q

What is the difference between generalized form of scleroderma and the limited variant?

A

limited form: a milder disease, usually present with skin involvement, CREST syndrome within this category

33
Q

What are some clinical features of scleroderma?

A
“stone facies”: tightening of facial skin/restricted motion of mouth
Raynaud phenomenon
painful tendonitis
joint pain
hypomotility and dysphagia of esophagus
intestinal motility problems b/c fibrosis
pulmonary fibrosis
scleroderma renal crisis
34
Q

What is mixed connective tissue disease?

A
SLE symptoms (rash, Raynaud, arthritis, arthralgias) 
Scleroderma signs (swollen hands, esophageal hypomotility, pulmonary interstitial disease) 
RA
35
Q

What is autoimmune disease?

A

Immune response against self-antigen
No longer able to differentiate b/t self- and non-self antigens
Loss of immune tolerance