MHC and transplanatation Flashcards

1
Q

In what types of cells is blood group substance found

A

all vascular endothelial cells.

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2
Q

what 2 types of isoagglutinins do all individuals have

A

anti A and anti B

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3
Q

what are isoagglutinins

A

Antibodies produced by an individual that cause agglutination of red blood cells in other individuals.

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4
Q

what happens when a donor is mismatched for the second time

A

necrosis is much faster.
• This is because the immune system has formed a memory
• 2nd response is more vigorous.

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5
Q

What is MHC

A

set of genes found in all vertebrate species.

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6
Q

What are the key roles of MHC

A

immune function- present ‘self’ and ‘nonself’ antigens for inspection by T cell antigen receptors.
disease susceptibility
reproductive success.

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7
Q

what chromosome is MHC found on

A

6 (short arm)

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8
Q

how many classes of MHC are there

A

3

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9
Q

which classes of MHC are involved in transplant

A

class I and class II (encode antigens)

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10
Q

what cell are class I expressed on

A

all nucleated cells.

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11
Q

What cells are class II antigens expressed on

A

B lymphocytes and expression can be indued on T lymphocytes

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12
Q

what type of biochemical molecules are MHC/HLA

A

glycoproteins.

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13
Q

How is MHC inherited

A

mendelian inheritance
each individual inherits 2 antigens at a given locus.
co-dominant expression. All inherited antigens are displayed on the cell surface.

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14
Q

what type os blood cell has lots of HLA’a

A

WBC

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15
Q

Is HLA highly polymorphic

A

Yes large number of allelic variants at each locus.

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16
Q

why is the advantage of having so many types of HLA

A

survival advantage
– as everyone in the population will have developed resistance and immunity against certain pathogens, overall as a population we have immense immunity to lots of pathogens.

17
Q

How do we determine different allelic forms of HLA which can form polymorphisms

A

use primers

18
Q

Is HLA part of the adaptive or complement immune system

A

adaptive

19
Q

What is direct recognition

A

happens immediately after transplant.
not typical body process.
T cells get through due to damage of capillary wall from surgery and stress and bind to graft.

20
Q

What is indirect recognition

A

normal process.
APC moves into tissue and is presented with graft peptides which it then processes and presents
migrates to lymph nodes where it can present it to T cells, which migrate to the graft

21
Q

What is semidirection recognition.

A
  • Recipient APc move in to tissue
  • Binds with donor APC
  • Migration of this new APC to lymph nodes where it will present to T cells.
22
Q

define sensitization

A

Any event which elicits an HLA directed immune response
• Pregnancy- foetus is allograft
• Blood transfusion- contain WBC which have HLA.
• Transplantation- HLA or the donor

23
Q

what methods are used to prevent sensitisation

A
  • Serum screening- determines patients and donors HLA profile to see if they match
  • Cross matching- checks recipients’ serum against donors.
24
Q

How does cross matching take place

A
  • Donor T lymphocyte with HLA
  • Recipient serum added which many contain antibodies against the HLA.
  • Florescence second antibody is used to see whether the antibody- HLA complex has formed
  • This is read through a detector.
25
Q

when does a hyper acute rejection occur

A

severely mismatched HLA

26
Q

What happens in hyper acute rejection

A
•	Antibodies in the recipient bind to endothelial cells of the transplant as they class it as foreign
•	This activates the coagulation cascade
–	Activate clotting cascade
–	Activate complement
–	Transplant becomes leaky and necrotic