Lecture 20; Immune privilige Flashcards

1
Q

What is special about sperm production?

A

It is an immunologically privileged site.

  • Semeniferous tubulus
  • Blood testis barrier
  • Tight junctions between sertoli cells
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2
Q

When is the blood/testis barrier broken?

A
  • Broken when barrier is damaged
    • Testicular Trauma
    • Infection
    • Vasectomy
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3
Q

What happens when the blood testis barrier is broken?

A

Production of antisperm antibodies

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4
Q

What are the mechanisms of antisperm antibodies?

A
  1. Agglutination
  2. Transport in female tract
  3. Fertilisation
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5
Q

Whats a potential application of ASA?

A

Contraception

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6
Q

Are oocytes immunologically protected?

A

No, there is no blood ovaries barrier.

Oocytes become arrested in meiosis prior to ovulation.

Therefore instances of autoimmunity can occur

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7
Q

What is an example of autoimmunity against oocytes?

A

Premature Ovarian failure

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8
Q

Define POF;

A

Menopause <40
1% women

  1. Follicles cannot mature
  2. Immunity to the primordial follicles leads to total loss
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9
Q

What are the possible causes of POF?

A

Antigenic Targets
Idiopathic
Diseases in other organs i.e addinsons

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10
Q

What are the potential antigenic targets in POF?

A
  • Steroid Hormone Metabolising Enzymes

P450 side chain cleavage (cholesterol to pregnenolone)
17a hydroxylase (progesterones – androgens)
3b hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (pregnenolone to progesterone)

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11
Q

Whats an animal model for POF (1)?

A
  1. Neonatal thymectomy 2–5 days post birth

– Causes autoimmune disease including POF in some strains of mice e.g. balb/C

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12
Q

Whats an animal model for POF (2)?

A
  1. Immunisation with ovarian antigens

– e.g. ZP3

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13
Q

Describe the relationship between the fetus and mum immunologically using grafts as an anology;

A
  • The fetus is a semi-allograft
  • Fetus is a complete allograft with donor oocytes/surrogates
  • Why isn’t it rejected by mum?
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14
Q

Why isnt the fetus rejected?

A

Syncytiotrophoblast! the cloak of invisibility

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15
Q

Why is Syncytiotrophoblast invisible?

A

It expresses no HLA molecules

Protects the fetus/placenta from maternal immune system

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16
Q

What happens if the syncytiotrophoblast is breached?

A

Breaches could lead to a maternal response e.g. villitis

17
Q

Is it really invisible?

A

Syncytiotrophoblast does express minor histocompatibility antigens

18
Q

What other fetal related structure invades mum?

A

Fetal trophoblast invade deeply into the maternal tissue in the uterus

• Fetal trophoblasts invade the maternal
decidua
• The decidua is full of leucocytes

19
Q

Describe the leucocytes of the decidua;

A
Leucocytes in decidua
• 70% NK-like cells
• 20% macrophages
• 10% T cells
• Almost no B cells
20
Q

Describe Nk cells;

A
  • Non-MHC restricted lymphocytes
  • Comprise ~3% of Peripheral blood lymphocytes
  • Kill by releasing cytotoxic products e.g. Granzyme & porforins
  • Antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC)
  • Target HLA/MHC-ve cells
    e. g. Tumours & virally infected cells - trophoblasts
21
Q

Describe uterine dendritic like cells

A
Peripheral blood NK cells are CD16+
(Responsible for ADCC by NK cells)
uNK cells CD16-, CD56bright
Origin is not clear in humans
Appear in decidua during menstrual cycle Large numbers during 1st half of pregnancy

In contact with trophoblast

22
Q

What is required for uNK cells to kill?

A
  • Only kill if IL-2 supplied

* IL-2 strikingly absent from implantation site

23
Q

What HLA do trophoblast express?

A
Invasive trophoblasts (EVTs) Do not express HLA-A or HLA-B
Do express HLA-G &amp; HLA-E Do express HLA-C
24
Q

What HLA molecules are thought to play a role in reproduction?

A

HLA-C has an emerging role in reproductive success

Specific role of HLA-G in reproduction

25
Q

Describe HLG

A

– Very limited/(no) functional polymorphism
– Expressed almost exclusively by EVTs
– Structurally different to classical Class I
proteins
– 6 isoforms, only HLA-G1 expressed at cell surface
– May interact with inhibitory receptors on NK cells to prevent cytolysis of invasive trophoblast

26
Q

What HLA’s do NK cells express?

A

1) C-type lectin CD94/NKG2A
2) ILT Immunoglobulin like transcripts
3) KIRs killer cell Ig-like receptors

27
Q

Descibre C-type lectin CD94/NKG2A;

A
  • Not expressed peripheral blood NK cells,
    Is expressed by uterine NK cells
  • Ligand HLA-E
  • HLA-E preferentially presents peptides derived from the leader sequences of other HLA molecules, particularly HLA-G
28
Q

Describe ILT Immunoglobulin like transcripts;

A

Low levels of ILT-2 are expressed by uNK

29
Q

Describe KIRs killer cell Ig-like receptors;

A
  • Inhibitory/stimulating receptors recognising HLA- C
  • Expressed by a higher proportion of uNK cells than PBLs from the same woman
  • Activating receptors that induce cytokine secretion but not cytotoxicity KIR2/DS1
  • uNK cells produce many cytokines including LIF, GM-CSF, CSF, TNF
30
Q

Describe KIRs and HLA-C haplotypes;

A






HLA-C is highly polymorphic and expressed by EVTs
Essentailly HLA-c alleles can be divided into two haplotypes C1 and C2
KIRs are also polymorphic.
In essence women may have two KIR haplotypes KIRA or KIRB

31
Q

Describe KIRs and HLA-C haplotypes;

A

– Women homozygous for the KIR A haplotype have an increased risk of pregnancy disorders when the fetus has a (paternal) HLA-C C2 haplotype
– this gives strongly inhibitory signals to uterine NK cells.
– HLA-C2 haplotypes + KIR2DS1 is protective