Immunology-Response to Infection Flashcards

1
Q

How does the immune system view the vast amount of pathogens we are info

A

Extracellular (interstitial space, blood or lymph and epithelium) and Intracellular (restricted to vesicles or cytoplasmic)

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2
Q

Where do viruses finally reside on infection of the host?

A

They are obligate intracellular pathogens that reside in the cytoplasm because they need host macromolecular machinery for replication.

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3
Q

How does the immune system control viral infections?

A

Prevent infection of cells by type I interferons and elimination of infected cells by using NK cells.

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4
Q

What are the type I interferons? When are they produced? How do they help prevent viral infection?

A

IFN-alpha: produced by mononuclear phagocytes. IFN-beta: produced by most cells in the body. They are produced when double-stranded RNA (PAMP) binds to a pattern recognition receptor (TLR3) in a virus-infected cell. These are then released from the infected cell and cause healthy cells to produce enzymes that block viral replication. They also induce expression of MHC I receptors on healthy cells, so that if they do get infected there will be high response of CTLs.

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5
Q

How do viruses shoot themselves in the foot when it comes to avoiding NK cells?

A

In the normal cells, a ligand binds to the NK cell activating receptor and MHC I binds to the NK cell inhibiting receptor. Both of these signals prevent killing of the healthy cell by the NK cells. In infected cells, the virus reduces expression of MHC I and induces killing of virus-infected cells by NK cells.

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6
Q

What molecules are released from NK cells to initiate cell apoptosis?

A

Perforin (polymerize to form pores in lipid bilayer of target cell) and granzymes (diffuse into target cell and activate caspases which induce apoptosis)

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7
Q

How does a virus initiate a CD8+ T-cell response?

A

Viral proteins are synthesized in the cytosol -> Peptide fragments are bound by MHC I in ER -> Bound peptides are transported to cell surface -> MHC I binds CD8+ TCR -> IL-2 release stimulates its own IL-2 receptor and T-cells proliferate and are activated to CTLs that kill virus-infected cells

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8
Q

How do CTLs kill virus infected cells?

A

1) Perforin opens cell membranes and granzymes activate apoptosis via caspases. 2) Fas ligand (FasL) engages Fas on target cells and induces apoptosis.

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9
Q

How do all of our vaccines use the immune system to prevent viral infection?

A

They induce production of antibodies that bind to cell surface receptors on the virus to prevent viral attachment to host cells.

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10
Q

What antibody isotypes are most effective for neutralization of viruses and toxins? How are they produced?

A

IgG and IgA. B-cells present viral peptide on MHC II to CD4+ TCR -> CD4+ T-cell produces CD40 ligand and cytokines -> CD40L binds to CD40 on B-cell and cytokines stimulate B-cell proliferation, differentiation, isotope switching (IgG, IgA, IgE), somatic hypermutation/affinity maturation (refines antibody specificity) and induces B-cell memory.

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11
Q

Innate immune factors against viruses

A

NK cells and type I interferons

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12
Q

Adaptive immune factors against viruses

A

CD8+ CTLs and antibodies.

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13
Q

When in a viral infection do the innate and adaptive immune response happen?

A

1) Innate interferons 2) Innate NK cells 3) Adaptive T-cell response

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14
Q

Where in the cell do Tb, listeria and leishmania typically live and thrive?

A

Within the phagosome and phagolysosomes. Note that by living in intracellular vesicles they are immune to antibody and most host damage is caused by the immune response.

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15
Q

If intracellular vesicular pathogens enjoy living in phagocytes and phagocytes are the only way we can get rid of them, how does our body deal with this conundrum?

A

Pattern-recognition receptor binds microbe and releases IL-12 as phagocytosis occurs -> IL-12 activates NK cells and they release IFN-gamma -> Increased phagocytosis and up regulation of phagocyte oxidase to produce more ROS. Additionally, IL-12 causes CD4+ T-cells to differentiate into Th1 helper cells that eventually take over the role of NK cells and produce even more IFN-gamma. These Th1 cells also express CD40L for the phagocyte’s CD40 receptor that further stimulates phagocytosis and production of ROS.

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16
Q

What players are involved in mediating defense against intracellular bacteria, fungi and protozoa?

A

Phagocytes (PMNs and macrophages), NK cells and cytokines (IL-12 and IF-gamma)

17
Q

How does phagocytosis normally occur when a phagocyte encounters a pathogen?

A

Microbe is recognized by pattern recognition receptors (alpha-helical transmembrane receptors, TLRs, mannose receptors) -> Cytoskeletal movement of phagosome, cytokine production induces ROS production and phagocytosis of microbe -> phagosome fuses with lysosome -> phagocyte oxidase activated and produces ROS

18
Q

2 things that NK cells do

A

1) Kill virus-infected cells 2) Act as a source of IF-gamma for macrophage activation

19
Q

What is the difference between the types of cells that differentiated from an activated naive CD4+ T-cell?

A

Clonal expansion and differentiation yields Th1 cells that produce IFN-gamma and Th2 cells that produce IL-4 and IL-5.

20
Q

What is the positive feedback loop that exists between activated macrophages and NK/Th1 cells?

A

Activated macrophages produce more IL-12 -> NK cells and Th1 cells produce more IFN-gamma in response to IL-12 which further activates the macrophages.

21
Q

What type of immune response determines if you’ll get the worst kind of leprosy?

A

An effective Th1 response potentiates phagocyte control of mycobacterium and localization to extremities resulting in tuberculoid leprosy. A Th2 response results in production of IL-4 and IL-5 that do not potentiate phagocytes (IL-5 actually suppresses macrophage activation) and you get the systemic lepromatous leprosy where the disease is poorly controlled.

22
Q

What is the main distinguishing feature in the immune response to extracellular pathogens vs. intracellular pathogens?

A

Since the pathogens are extracellular they are susceptible to complement.

23
Q

How can complement become innately activated (not involving antibody)

A

Alternative pathway and mannose-binding lectin pathway (note that the classical pathway is activated by antibody).

24
Q

3 main actions of complement

A

1) Opsinization of microbe by C3b to enhance phagocytosis 2) Soluble C3a and C5a stimulate inflammation and recruitment of phagocytes to sites of infection 3) Formation of membrane attack complexes

25
Q

In addition to phagocytosis and stimulation of phagocyte oxidase, how else to macrophages help to fight infection?

A

They produce cytokines IL-1, IL-6 and TNF-alpha. These mediate systemic reactions shown below.

26
Q

Although antibodies activate the classical pathway to induce microbial opsinization by C3b, how do they opsinize microbes in the absence of complement?

A

IgG antibodies opsinize microbe -> Antibody Fc region binds phagocyte Fc receptors -> Phagocyte activation -> Ingestion and killing of microbe

27
Q

What type of antibodies are best at activating the classical pathway of complement?

A

IgM

28
Q

What differentiated CD4+ T-cells are important in recruitment of PMNs to site of infection?

A

Th17 cells produce IL-17 which is chemotactic for neutrophils

29
Q

What are the innate immune defenses and adaptive immune defenses our body uses against viruses? Intracellular bacteria/fungi/protozoa? Extracellular bacteria/fungi/protozoa?

A

*

30
Q

What T-cells are key in fighting helminth infection?

A

Th2 cells produce IL-4 and IL-5 -> IL-4 stimulates IgG and IgE production and IL-5 activates eosinophils -> IgE degranulates mast cells and binds eosinophils -> Eosinophils degranulate to kill helminth