CSIM 1.30 - Transplantation Flashcards

1
Q

How are naive T-cells activated?

A

Binding to specific Ag presented by APC alongside a conjugate MHC molecule and co-stimulatory signals

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2
Q

Where are MHC-class 1 molecules expressed?

A
T-cells
B-cells
Dendritic cells
Macrophages
Thymic corticle epithelial cells
ALL nucleated cells
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3
Q

Where are MHC-class 2 molecules expressed?

A

Activate T-cells
B-cells
Macrophages
Thymic corticle epithelial cells

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4
Q

Name the two MHC molecules properties?

A
Polygenic - several different MHC class 1/2 genes exist
Polymorphic - multiple variants of each gene (HLA-A1 - A303)
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5
Q

Name the different polygenic forms of MHC-class 1?

A

HLA-A
HLA-B
HLA-C
Each person inherits one of each from either parent (x6)

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6
Q

Name the different polygenic forms of MHC-class 2?

A

HLA-DR
HLA-DQ
HLA-DP
Each person inherits one of each from either parent (x6)

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7
Q

In terms of the MHC polymorphic properties describe how MHC-restriction occurs?

A

A T-cell receptor activated by Influenza Ag in association with HLA-A1 will NOT recognise the same Ag in association with HLA-A2

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8
Q

Describe direct allorecognition?

A

DONOR APC (from transplanted organ) migrates to recipient lymph node where recipient’s naive T-cells recognise the specific Ag and donor MHC molecule and secondary signal obtained (T-cell activation) - migrates to graft and rejects it

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9
Q

What type of rejection is initiated by direct allorecognition?

A

Acute rejection via direct CD8 T-cytotoxic response

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10
Q

Describe In-direct allorecognition?

A

RECIPIENT APC processes the Ag from the graft and presents this to recipient naive T-cell (recognition of specific Ag + self MHC + co-stimulatory signals) - T-cell activation - migrates to graft and rejects

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11
Q

What type of rejection is initiated by In-direct allorecognition?

A

Chronic rejection as fewer T-cells are activated

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12
Q

Describe hyperacute rejection and give an example?

A

Rejection within minutes
Recipient carries pre-existing antibodies against the Ag
ABO mismatch

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13
Q

Describe acute rejection?

A

Graft accepted on average 13 days
T-cell mediated rejection occurs via CD8 T-cytotoxic cells/macrophages/NK-cells
Second graft from same donor = rejected more rapidly as alloreactive T-cells are now pre-formed

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14
Q

Describe chronic rejection?

A

Concentration arteriosclerosis accumulating over a number of months/years
Infiltrative fibrosis is associated with ischaemia re-perfusion injury of transplant and alloreactive T-cells secrete CCL5 attracting more macrophages - Increased inflammation

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15
Q

Describe graft vs Host disease?

A

Transplant bone marrow (new immune system) perceives the host as ‘foreign’ and attacks

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16
Q

What criteria is used to diagnose graft vs Host disease?

A

Billingham criteria

17
Q

Describe the three phases involved in graft vs Host disease pathology?

A

Phase 1 - Tissue damage leads to inflammatory cytokine release
Phase 2 - Donor T-cell activation by up-regulated APC
Phase 3 - Expanded CD8 T-cytotoxic cell and NK-cell attack host tissues

18
Q

What is special about a corneal transplant?

A

Cornea is immune privileged (via BBB) therefore rarely rejected

19
Q

What is critical for a successful solid organ transplant and under what circumstances might this not be needed?

A

Blood group matching

Not required in infants

20
Q

What is critical for a successful bone-marrow transplant?

A

HLA matching