Autoimmunity Flashcards

1
Q

What is the definition of autoimmunity?

A

Loss of tolerance to self-antigens

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2
Q

What is autoimmunity mediated by?

A

Mediated either by autoantibodies or self-reactive T cells
* can be localised, organ-specific or generalised
* tends to improve with immunsuppresive therapy

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3
Q

What are Witebsky’s postulates?

A
  1. Ig or autoreactive T cell must be demonstratable
  2. Antibody to which the autoreactive T cell binds must be identified
  3. The symptoms must be inducible in an experimental animal study
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4
Q

What are the three main mechanisms in place to help revent autoimmunity?

A
  • Deletion
  • Anergy
  • Regulation
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5
Q

When does apoptosis of self-reactive T cells occur?

A

During negative selection
some self-reactive T cells survive and go on to become regulatory CD4+ T cells

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6
Q

What occurs if the B cell central tolerance is lov-avidity self antigen recognition?

A

Anergic B cell rather than Deletion

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7
Q

What is clonal deletion?

A

cell death induced by activation via Fas-Ligand signalling
* There is an increase in Fas expression on activated lymphocytes that are persistently stimulated by the antigen

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8
Q

When does inactivation of lymphocytes that encounter the antigen occur?

A

Occurs in the absence of co-stimulation signals (CD28-B7/CD80&86 in TCL, CD40-CD40L in BCL )
The inactivation is reversible but difficult

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9
Q

How does supression during peripheral tolerance work?

A

Mediated by T regulatory cells
* * Produce IL-4*
, IL-10, TGF-β → anti-inflammatory
* Express cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4)
* inhibitory receptor that binds to B7/CD80&86 on APCs (prevents binding CD28)

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10
Q

What are the mechanisms overview of autoimmunity?

A
  1. Exposure of previously hidden antigens
    * Can occur due to trauma, inflammation
  2. Exposure of cross-reacting antigen
    * Pathogen epitope cross-reactivity with self antigens (molecular mimicry)
  3. Bystander activation
    * Inadvertent stimulation of self-reactive lymphocyte in periphery
  4. Alteration of self-antigen
    * e.g. drug binding to erythrocytes creating a new epitope
  5. Dysregulation of immune system
    * Defects in T regulatory cell populations
  6. Genetic predispositions
    * Familial disease related to MHC alleles in dogs
    * Multiple genetic defects usually required for disease
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11
Q

What is molecular mimicry?

A

When the effector cells or moleucles attack a self-antigen because it bears similiar determinants to the main antigen

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12
Q

What is a hapten?

A

small molecule that elicits an antibody response only when attached to the carrier

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13
Q

What is an example of an autoimmune disease in veterinary medicine?

A
  • Systemic - lupus
  • Organ Specific- Diabetes mellitus type 1, IMHA, IMTP
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14
Q

What is the pathogenesis of SLE?

A

the predominant antibody is the ANA
It forms immune complexes (type III hypersensitivity)
then deposits in the glomeruli, blood vessels, skin, synovial joints

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15
Q

Why is there fever in SLE?

A
  • Neutrophils (Type III HS!) produce IL-1 and TNF-α
    (mediate fever)

there is also crusting, ulcerations, renal failure …

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16
Q

What are LE bodies?

A

phagocytes that have ingested an opsonised nucleus