Mechanisms of immunoregulation suppressor cells Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 4 main processes involved in immune suppression?

A
  1. Antigen usage
  2. Antibody-mediated suppression
  3. Hormonal regulation
  4. Suppressor T lymphocytes
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2
Q

How does antigen usage lead to immune suppression?

A
  1. Antigen on pathogen trigger immune response
  2. Immune response reduces antigen concentration
  3. Reduced immune stimulation
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3
Q

How does antibody-mediated suppression work?

A
  1. Reducing antigen concentration
    -antibody combines with antigen > reducing antigen concentration
  2. Immune complexes of antigen & antibody are immunosuppressive
    -antigen & antibodies form immune complexes which are then removed by phagocytes that subsequently release suppressive substances
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4
Q

How does hormone regulation lead to immune suppression?

A

Neuro-endocrine-immunological loop
-effects mediated by soluble messenger proteins

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5
Q

How does stress lead to immune suppression?

A

Stress > pituitary > adrenal cortex > cortisol > immune suppression

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6
Q

How does immune suppression caused by stress lead to a fever?

A

Cytokines released due to immune suppression > hypothalamus changes temperature set point = fever

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7
Q

What are the 2 main types of suppressor cells?

A

CD4+ T(reg) cells - spontaneously arising/induced types
(majority)
CD8+T(reg) cells - induced type
(less important)

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8
Q

How do CD4+ suppressor T cells work?

A

Regulate the balance of Th1 vs Th2
Natural suppressors (CD4+, CD25+ T reg)
Induced suppressors (CD4+ IL-10 producing Tr1 cells)
Th3 TGF𝛃 producing induced suppressors

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9
Q

How can one CD4 T cell subset suppress another, in terms of immune deviation?

A

-Th1 cells produce IFN𝛄 & promote CMI (cell mediated immunity)
-Th2 cells produce IL4 & IL13 > promote humoral (antibody) immunity
-In an immune response, one may dominate over the other, resulting in a polarised immune response = “immune deviation”

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10
Q

How do CD4+, CD25+, FoxP3+ T reg act as natural suppressors?

A

Always normally present in body
Require direct contact to work
Control of unwanted immune responses (eg autoimmunity)
Can be identified by the fact that they express CD25 & FoxP3
Are found in humans & animals (eg dogs, cats, horses)

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11
Q

How does IL-10 produce Tr1 induced suppressors?

A

Induced by an immune response
Called Tr1 cells
Work via cytokines (not direct contact) - key cytokine is IL-10

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