28 Immunopharmacology Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three main reasons that Immunosuppressive drugs are used?

A
  1. Suppression of rejection of transplanted organs and tissues
  2. Suppression of ‘Graft-vs-Host’ disease (GVHD) which may arise from donor lymphocytes reacting against host, especially in bone marrow transplants
  3. Autoimmune diseases
    • eg lupus (systemic lupus erythematosus), rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, ulcerative colitis, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura
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2
Q

If there are immunocompetent cells in a donor graft, what phenomenon might occur? What are the four main tissues targeted during this?

A
  • Graft-vs-Host Disease (GVHD)
  • Four tissues
    • liver
    • skin
    • mucosa
    • gut
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3
Q

What happens during rejection in the context of host recognition of the donor organ during transplantation?

A

Antigens may be recognized as non-self and elicit an immune response that attacks the donor organ

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4
Q

What is rheumatoid arthritis?

A

Auto-immune disease primarily affecting the joints

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5
Q

What is Ulcerative colitis?

A

T-cell infiltration (auto-immune) and ulceration in the colon

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6
Q

What are the two major phases of the immune response?

A
  1. Induction phase
  2. Effector phase
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7
Q

What happens during the induction phase of the immune response?

A

The induction phase includes recognition and presentation of foreign antigen, activation and proliferation of naive Th0 cells into Th1 and Th2 cells

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8
Q

The induction phase of the immune response begins with _________

A

The induction phase of the immune response begins with Antigen presentation

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9
Q

What is antigen presentation?

(first step of the first phase (induction) of the immune response)

  • What cytokine signalling molecule is major here?
A
  • Antigen-presenting cell (APC) - eg a macrophage - absorbs and processes an antigen
  • exposes fragments of the antigen on the receptor of a T-helper precursor cell (Thp cell)
    • triggers differentiation into T-helper 0 cells
  • Interleukin-2 (IL-2)
    • Exerts positive feedback on Thp cells stimulating them to divide and differentiate into Th0 cells
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10
Q

What happens during the induction phase following antigen presentation?

What Cytokine signaling molecule is important here?

A
  • Clonal Expansion and Maturation
    • Th0 cells divide into Th1 or Th2 cells
  • Interleukin-4 (IL-4)
    • Exerts positive feedback on Th0 cells, stimulating them to divide and differentiate into either Th1 or Th2
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11
Q

What happens during the Effector Phase of immune response?

A

The effector phase includes

  • the cell-mediated T-cell responses (cells ‘killing’ infected or foreign cells) derived from Th1 cells
  • Antibody-mediated responses derived from Th2 cells (leading to activation of B-cells)
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12
Q

What is clonal expansion?

A

Clonal expansion is the process by which daughter cells arise from a parent cell.

Repetitive cell division to increase the number of Th1 and Th2 cells

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13
Q

During the effector phase of the immune response, Th2 cells differentiate into ______

A

Th2 cells differentiate into B-cells

  • Antibody producing cells
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14
Q

B-cells are the _____________ cells

A

B-cells are the anti-body producing cells

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15
Q

During the Effector phase of the immune response, Th1 cells release _______ or become Tc cells and __________

A

During the Effector phase of the immune response, Th1 cells release cytokines or become Tc (cytotoxic T) cells and kill virally infected cells

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16
Q

What phase of the immune response do most of the drugs we learned about influence?

A

Most of the drug effects influence the induction phase

17
Q

What are five several critical steps/regulators of the immune response that are targeted by available immunosuppressant drugs?

A
  1. Inhibiting positive feedback cycle of IL-2 by inhibiting IL-2 production
  2. Inhibition of cytokine gene expression (glucocorticoids)
    • during the effector phase
  3. Cytotoxicity (killing immune cells or preventing their maturation/expansion)
  4. inhibition of nucleic acid synthesis
  5. Blockage of various T-cell surface receptors to prevent immune activation
    • (eg antigen presentation machinery)
18
Q

What are two examples of Calcineurin inhibitors?

A

Cyclosporine

Tacrolimus

19
Q

What is the mechanism of action of calcineurin inhibitors (eg Cyclosporine and tacrolimus)

A
  • Cyclosporine and tacrolimus bind to their targets (cyclophilin, FKBP respectively).
    • The drug-bound targets suppress calcineurin
      • suppresses the pathway that leads to IL-2 gene transcription
  • pathway leading to IL-2 gene transcription:
    • Activation of naive Th0-cells and clonal expansion of T cells requires activation of several signaling pathways including the Calcineurin-NFAT (nuclear factor of activated T-cells) pathway
    • Activation of T-cell receptor generates a Ca2+ Signal leading to activation of calcineurin (phosphatase) and dephosphorylation of NFAT
    • Dephosphorylated NFAT migrates to the nucleus, leading to expression of IL-2 that is required for activation and proliferation of T-cells
20
Q

What leads to the transcription of Interleukin-2 (IL-2)?

A

pathway leading to IL-2 gene transcription:

  • Activation of naive Th0-cells and clonal expansion of T cells requires activation of several signaling pathways including the Calcineurin-NFAT (nuclear factor of activated T-cells) pathway
  • Activation of T-cell receptor generates a Ca2+ Signal leading to
    1. activation of calcineurin (phosphatase) and
    2. dephosphorylation of NFAT
  • Dephosphorylated NFAT migrates to the nucleus, leading to the expression of IL-2 that is required for activation and proliferation of T-cells
21
Q

Target of cyclosporine?

Effect?

A
  • Cyclosporine is a Calcineurin inhibitor
  • Cyclosporine binds to cyclophilin and suppresses calcineurin which prevents IL-2 gene transcription
    • Inhibition of calcineurin by the cyclophilin: cyclosporin complex
    • prevents NFAT-mediated gene transcription, leading to inhibition of t-cell maturation and proliferation
  • prevents activation of naive Th0 cells and clonal expansion of T-cells
22
Q

Target and effect of tacrolimus?

A

Tacrolimus is a Calcineurin inhibitor

  • binds to FKBP
  • suppresses calcineurin
    • inhibition of calcineurin by the FKBP:tacrolimus complex
      • prevents NFAT-mediated gene transcription (especially important is the suppression of IL-2)
        • prevents activation of naive Th0 cells and clonal expansion of T-cells
23
Q

What do Proliferation Signal Inhibitors do and what is an example?

A

Proliferation signal inhibitors interfere with the downstream signals of IL-2 receptor activation

  • examples
    • Rapamycin/sirolimus
24
Q

Rapamycin binds to ________ and inhibits ___________

A

Rapamycin (a proliferation signal inhibitor) binds to FKBP and inhibits a protein complex called mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin)

  • Inhibition of mTOR by the FKBP:SIROLIMUS complex
    • suppress cellular responses to IL-2 receptor activation
  • mTOR is a major pathway responsible for promoting cell growth and proliferation
    *
25
Q

What is cyclophosphamide?

A
  • Cytotoxic agent
  • alkylating agent
    • leads to cross-linking of neighboring bases
      • interferes with DNA replication
  • Most effective in rapidly dividing cells (useful in cancer tx and suppression of rapidly dividing immune cells)
26
Q

What is Azathioprine?

A
  • Cytotoxic agent
  • metabolized to 6-mercaptopurine (a fraudulent nucleotide)
    • inhibits synthesis of nucleotides and interferes with cell division
      • effective against rapidly dividing cells during clonal expansion
27
Q

What part of monoclonal antibodies determines antigen specificity?

A

The Fab region

28
Q

Describe the structure of an antibody

A
  • 2 heavy chains
  • 2 light chains
  • Fab region
    • determines antigen specificity
  • Fc region determines the antibody ‘class’ (IgA, IgG, IgM, etc(
    • different classes of Fc regions are recognized by receptors on different immune cell types leading to different immune responses
29
Q

What region of an antibody determines the class of antibody and in turn the cellular response that occurs?

A

Fc region determines the antibody ‘class’ (IgA, IgG, IgM, etc(

different classes of Fc regions are recognized by receptors on different immune cell types leading to different immune responses

30
Q

How do we prevent antibodies raised from other animals from being rapidly degraded in our bodies?

A

By using ‘Chimeric’ or ‘humanized’ versions

reduces their antigenicity - increases their lifetime in the body

31
Q

What is humanization/chimerization?

A

Replacement of conserved regions of the mouse monoclonal antibody with the corresponding sequence from human antibodies (ie combination of mouse Fab fragment with human Fc fragment)

  • umab or -zumab for humanized antibodies
  • imab or -ximab for chimeric products
32
Q

What is Alemtuzumab?

A

Mab = monoclonal antibody = antibody based therapy

  • Humanized IgG1 that recognizes CD52 receptor on many immune cell types
    • The IgG1 Fc domain is recognized by phagocytic immune cells (eg macrophages, neutrophils, dendritic cells) complement and NK cells
      • Leads to cell death by lysis or phagocytosis
      • Healthy and destructive T and B cells are destroyed
33
Q

What is Basiliximab?

A
  • Chimeric mouse-human IgG1 that binds to CD25 (part of the IL-2 receptor alpha chain) on activated lymphocytes
  • causes immunosuppression by blocking IL-2 from binding to activated lymphocytes (IL-2 Antagonist)
34
Q
A