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Immunologic Tolerance

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Progressive replacement of the salivary tissue by dense lymphoid infiltrates ... Salivary epithelial cells are immunologically-active participants in the disease ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Immunologic Tolerance


1
Immunologic Tolerance
  • Tolerance unresponsiveness to an antigen
  • Self-tolerance unresponsiveness to ones own
    antigens
  • In generating billions of B and T cells, some
    will react against self antigens!
  • There are two ways of muzzling these cells
    central tolerance and peripheral tolerance

2
Immunologic Tolerance
1. Central Tolerance carried out during fetal
development in the PRIMARY LYMPHOID ORGANS I.
Thymus for T cells ii. Bone marrow fetal liver
for B cells 2. Peripheral Tolerance operates in
the SECONDARY LYMPHOID ORGNAS, in the periphery
after birth
3
Central tolerance
  • 1. Clonal deletion (apoptotic cell death)
  • During maturation of lymphocytes in the
    thymus for T cell or in the bone marrow for B
    maturation, immature lymphocytes that recognize
    ubiquitous self-antigen with high affinity are
    deleted by negative selection
  • 2. Clonal anergy
  • functional inactivation without cell death
    lack co-stimulatory signal
  • 3. Immunological ignorance
  • reactive lymphocytes and their target antigen
    are both detectable within an individual, yet no
    autoimmune attack occurs.
  • 4. Receptor editing
  • autoreactive B cells escape anergy or deletion
    by further rearranging their immunoglobulin genes

4
Anergy Induction Lack of Co-stimulation or
Presence of CTLA-4B7 Interaction
5
FEATURES OF B-CELL TOLERANCE
  • The fate of self-reactive B cells depends on the
    amount and affinity of the BCR and the amount and
    nature of the antigen
  • soluble self antigens Anergy
  • membrane self antigens Deletion
  • High affinity BCR to self antigens Deletion
  • Moderate affinity BCR to self antigens Anergy
  • Low affinity BCR to self antigens Ignorance

6
Peripheral tolerance
  • clonal deletion Fas-FasL mechanism
  • clonal anergy
  • clonal ignorance
  • AICD
  • supression by Ts cell (T CD4)
  • - Suppress T-cell proliferation via rapid
    secretion of IL-10 and TGF-ß
  • - Express high levels of CTLA-4

7
Autoimmunity Origins
  • Horror autotoxicus Literally, the horror of
    self-toxicity.
  • A term coined by the German immunologist Paul
    Ehrlich (1854-1915) to describe the body's innate
    aversion to immunological self-destruction.

8
Autoimmunity
  • 5 to 7 adult affected.
  • Two third women.
  • More than 40 human diseases autoimmune in origin.

9
Causes of Autoimmunity
10
Mechanisms of autoimmunity
  • Ag released from hidden location (by injury or
    infection)
  • Antigen generated by molecular changes
    (Development of completely new epitopes on normal
    protein. eg RF)
  • Molecular mimicry (Crossreaction)
  • Alteration in Ag processing In IDDM, ß cells
    from pancreas express high levels of Class I and
    Class II MHC molecules.
  • Infection Polyclonal lymphocytes activation
    (LPS, Super Ag) inhanced stimulation of co
    stimulator
  • Lymphocytes abnormalities
  • Cytokine Imbalance (?IL-2 in SLE)
  • Deficiencies (Fas, complement, CTL-4)
  • Toxins, Drugs, Chemicals (including food), UV,
    Stress
  • Hormon (estrogens, lack of androgens)
  • LEFT handed individuals
  • Genetic factors

11
Association between HLA and susceptibility to
autoimmune disease
12
Role of Infection in Autoimmunity
13
Rheumatic fever is a classic example of molecular
mimicry
14
Pathogens
15
Association of infection with autoimmune disease
16
Drugs and Toxins
  • Drugs
  • Examples Procainamide (Pronestyl)
  • Drug induced lupus
  • Toxins
  • Examples Toxic Oil Syndrome
  • Occurred in Spain in 1981 after people ate
    contaminated olive oil.
  • People developed unique illness marked by lung
    disease, eosinophilia, and excessive IgE

17
Estrogens and Autoimmunity
18
Complement Deficiencies
  • CD59 or CD55
  • Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria
  • autoimmune hemolytic anemia
  • autoimmune thrombocytopenia
  • lupus lymphopenia
  • Deficiencies in the classical complement pathway
    renders pts more likely to develop immune complex
    diseases
  • SLE
  • RA

19
Effects of autoimmunity
1) Tissue destruction Diabetes CTLs destroy
insulin-producing ß-cells in pancreas 2)
Antibodies block normal function Myasthenia
gravis Ab binds acetylcholine receptors 3)
Antibodies stimulate inappropriate
function Graves disease Ab binds TSH
receptor Mimics thyroid-stimulating
hormone Activates unregulated thyroid hormone
production 4) Antigen-antibody complexes affect
function Rheumatoid arthritis IgM specific for
Fc portion of IgG IgM-IgG complexes deposited in
joints inflammation
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24
Autoimmune diseases classified by mechanism of
tissue damage
25
Autoimmune diseases mediated by cytotoxic
antibodies (Type II)
26
Autoimmune diseases mediated by immune complexes
(Type III)
27
Autoimmune diseases mediated by T-cells (Type IV)
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30
Diabetes
  • Disease in which the body does not produce or
    properly use insulin
  • T cell Disease
  • T cells attack and destroy pancreatic beta cells

31
Multiple Sclerosis
MS patients can have autoantibodies and/or self
reactive T cells which are responsible for the
demyelination
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Treatment for autoimmunity
  • Immunosuppression (e.g., prednisone, cyclosporin
    A)
  • Anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDS, Corticosteroids)
  • Removal of thymus (some MG patients)
  • Radiation
  • Plasmapheresis (remove Ab-Ag complexes)
  • T-cell vaccination (activate suppressing T cells)
  • Block MHC with similar peptide
  • Cell Blocking Reagents (monoclonal Ab)
  • anti-CD20 (Rituxan)
  • anti-CD3 (Teplizumab)
  • anti-CD4
  • Cytokine Blocking Reagents
  • TNF (Humira, Enbrel)
  • anti-IL2R monoclonal Ab

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Rheumatiod Arthritis
  • Auto-immune disorder which results in
    inflammation of the synovial lining of the joint
    and cartilage destruction.
  • This result in loss of function.
  • Affects 1 of adults.

38
Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia
  • IgG or IgM antibodies directed against red cell
    surface antigens (Coombs test is positive)
  • Opsonization of red cells by antibody and
    complement leads to phagocytosis of red cells in
    liver and spleen
  • May be triggered by infections, drugs or be
    idiopathic

39
Goodpastures syndrome Immunopathology Autoanti
bodies to basement membrane of glomerulus and
lung alveoli. Specificity part of type IV
collagen
40
Lupus
  • Typical patient young woman with butterfly rash
  • Symptoms unpredictable (relapsing/remitting)
  • Multisystem (skin, kidneys, joints, heart)
  • Antinuclear antibodies

Etiology
  • Autoantibodies!
  • Antinuclear Ab present in all patients with
    SLE... but found in other autoimmune diseases too
  • Anti-RBC, -lymphocyte, -platelet, or
    phospholipid antibodies may be present too
  • Underlying cause unclear
  • Genetic predisposition
  • plus triggers (UV radiation, drugs)

41
Lupus
Whats so bad about having these autoantibodies?
  • They cause tissue injury!
  • Form immune complexes
  • Cause destruction, phagocytosis of cells
  • Multisystem effects
  • Kidney (renal failure)
  • Skin (butterfly rash)
  • CNS (focal neurologic deficits)
  • Joints (arthritis)
  • Heart (pericarditis, endocarditis)

42
Lupus
Things a dentist might see
  • Young woman with polyarthritis and a butterfly
    (or other) skin rash
  • Sensitivity to sunlight
  • Oral lesions nonspecific, red-white, erosive
  • Headaches, seizures, or psychiatric problems
  • Pleuritic chest pain
  • Unexplained fever

Whats the prognosis?
  • Variable! Some have few symptoms, rare patients
    die within months.
  • Most patients relapses/remissions over many
    years.
  • Acute flare-ups controlled with steroids
  • 80 10-year survival
  • Most common cause of death renal failure

43
Clinical CorrelationSystemic Lupus
Erythematosus (SLE)
  • An 18 year old female with malaise, fatigue,
    rash, and joint pains.
  • Exam butterfly rash, petechiae (from
    vasculitis), swollen joints
  • Lab Positive Anti-Nuclear Antibody, positive
    Coombs and anemia. Urine examination casts,
    protein, red cells. Low C3, C4 and elevated
    anti-dsDNA antibody.

44
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Things You Must Know
  • Symmetric, mostly small-joint arthritis
  • Systemic symptoms (skin, heart, vessels, lungs)
  • Rheumatoid factor
  • Cytokines (especially TNF) cause damage

45
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Etiology
  • Genetically predisposed patient
  • Something (bug? self-Ag?) activates T cells
  • T cells release cytokines
  • activate macrophages (causing destruction)
  • cause B cells to make antibodies against joint
  • Most important of these cytokines TNF
  • Cytokines cause inflammation and tissue damage

46
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Joint disease
  • Mainly small joints (hands), but also knees,
    elbows, shoulders
  • Symmetric characteristic hand features
  • Chronic synovitis with pannus formation
  • synovial cell proliferation
  • inflammation
  • granulation tissue

47
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Systemic disease
  • Weakness, malaise, fever
  • Vasculitis
  • Pleuritis, pericarditis
  • Lung fibrosis
  • Eye changes
  • Rheumatoid nodules on forearms

48
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Rheumatoid factor
  • Circulating IgM antibody
  • Directed against patients OWN IgG!
  • Forms IgM-IgG immune complexes, which deposit in
    joints and cause badness
  • Present in 80 of patients

49
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Things a dentist might see
  • Female patient with aching, stiff joints,
    especially in morning
  • Symmetric joint swelling
  • Fingers ulnar deviation, swan-neck deformities,
    boutonniere deformities
  • Rheumatoid nodules

50
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Whats the prognosis?
  • Variable!
  • A few patients stabilize
  • Most patients have chronic course with
    progressive joint destruction and disability
  • Lifespan shortened by 10-15 years
  • Treatment steroids, anti-TNF agents

51
Sjögren Syndrome
Things You Must Know
  • Inflammatory disease of salivary and lacrimal
    glands
  • Dry eyes, dry mouth
  • T cells react against some Ag (self? viral?) in
    gland gland gets destroyed
  • Increased risk of lymphoma

52
Sjögren Syndrome
Etiology
  • CD4 T cells attack self antigens in glands
    (why?!)
  • Autoantibodies are present, but probably are not
    the primary cause of tissue injury
  • ANAs
  • RF
  • Anti-SS-A, anti-SS-B
  • Viral trigger?
  • Genetic predisposition

53
Sjögren Syndrome
  • Salivary and lacrimal glands
  • enlarged
  • marked inflammation and gland destruction
  • 40x increased risk of lymphoma!
  • Systemic disease
  • fatigue
  • arthralgia/myalgia
  • Raynaud phenomenon
  • vasculitis
  • peripheral neuropathy
  • often, patient has another autoimmune disease too

54
Sjögren Syndrome
Things a dentist might see
  • Female between 35-45
  • Enlarged salivary glands
  • Raynaud phenomenon
  • Keratoconjunctivitis sicca (dry eyes)
  • Oral changes
  • Xerostomia (dry mouth)
  • mucosal atrophy
  • candidiasis
  • mucosal ulceration
  • dental caries
  • taste dysfunction

55
Sjögren Syndrome
How do you treat it?
  • Treatment is mostly supportive and symptom-based.
  • Oral treatment adequate hydration, scrupulous
    dental hygiene, cholinergic agents (stimulate
    saliva release), frequent dental exams
  • Eye treatment lubricating solutions, surgical
    procedures
  • Systemic symptom treatment steroids, other
    immunosuppressive drugs

56
Sjögrens Syndrome
  • Chronic autoimmune disorder
  • Major clinical manifestations resulting from
    changes in exocrine glands

57
Forms of Sjögrens Syndrome
  • Primary Sjögrens is characterized by
    inflammatory cell involvement of both the
    salivary and lacrimal glands
  • Secondary Sjögrens includes other defined
    connective tissue disease
  • Causes are unknown

58
Features of Sjögrens Syndrome
  • Glandular epithelial cells participate in the
    autoimmune disease process
  • Epithelial cells produce a number of
    immunologically active mediators
  • May serve as antigen-presenting cells
  • Epithelial cell responses modulate mechanisms
    occurring in the salivary glands

59
Is Sjögrens Syndrome an Autoimmune Disorder?
  • Described as an autoimmune exocrinopathy (Strand
    and Talal, 1980)
  • Grouped with other connective tissue diseases
  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Systemic lupus erythematosis (SLE)
  • What is the evidence that it is an autoimmune
    disease?

60
Evidence that Sjögrens Syndrome is an Autoimmune
Disease
  • A specific auto-immunogen and pathogenic
    antibodies have not been identified
  • Autoantibodies that have been found have not been
    shown to have any direct pathogenic effects on
    exocrine tissues
  • There is substantial circumstantial evidence that
    tissue damage is the result of autoimmunity

61
Polyclonal Hypergammaglobulinemia
  • B-cell hyper-responsiveness
  • Marked elevations of IgG Production of rheumatoid
    factors
  • Presence of anti-nuclear antibodies
  • Extractable nuclear antigens Anti-SS-A (Ro) and
    anti-SS-B (La)
  • Antibodies are found directed against salivary
    duct cells (90 of patients)
  • Primarily against extractable nuclear antigens
  • Concentration does not correlate with gland
    destruction

62
Other Characteristics
  • Elevated sedimentation rates and decreased WBC
    counts, as seen in other autoimmune connective
    tissue diseases
  • Specific extended MHC haplotype at a higher
    frequency than controls
  • MHC-encoded proteins
  • Induction of tolerance to self proteins
  • Selection of the T-cell repertoire
  • Binding and presentation of antigen to T-cells

63
Histopathology
  • Mononuclear infiltrate consisting primarily of
    T-cells (primarily CD4)
  • Host of mediators
  • Altered cell adhesion molecules expression
  • Increased HLA class II antigens expression
  • Immunosuppressive therapy often effective

64
Classical Histopathological Lesion
  • Lympho-epithelial lesion affecting the parotid
    gland
  • Progressive replacement of the salivary tissue by
    dense lymphoid infiltrates
  • Formation of proliferating islands of ductal
    epithelial cells
  • Creates well-formed lymphoid follicles typical of
    MALT and may give rise to lymphomas of the MALT
    type as an expansion of monoclonal B-cells

65
Conclusion
  • Numerous changes in immune factors in Sjögrens
    Syndrome
  • Salivary glands appears as a highly active,
    immune-mediated inflammatory sites
  • Salivary epithelial cells are immunologically-acti
    ve participants in the disease process

66
Systemic Sclerosis (Scleroderma)
Things You Must Know
  • Excessive fibrosis throughout body skin, viscera
  • Claw hands, mask-like face
  • Microvascular disease also present
  • Diffuse and limited types

67
Systemic Sclerosis (Scleroderma)
Etiology
  • CD4 T cells accumulate for some reason
  • T cells release cytokines that activate mast
    cells and macrophages, which release fibrogenic
    cytokines
  • B cell activation also occurs (diagnostic
    antibody anti-Scl 70) but doesnt play major
    role
  • The cause of microvascular changes is unknown

68
Systemic Sclerosis (Scleroderma)
Organs involved
  • Skin diffuse, sclerotic atrophy. Fingers first.
  • GI rubber-hose lower esophagus
  • Lungs fibrosis, pulmonary hypertension
  • Kidneys narrowed vessels, hypertension
  • Heart myocardial fibrosis

69
Systemic Sclerosis (Scleroderma)
Limited type vs. diffuse type
  • Limited
  • Mild skin involvement (face, fingers)
  • Involvement of viscera occurs later
  • Also called CREST syndrome
  • Calcinosis
  • Raynaud phenomenon
  • Esophageal dysmotility
  • Sclerodactyly
  • Telangiectasia
  • Benign course

70
Systemic Sclerosis (Scleroderma)
Limited type vs. diffuse type
  • Limited
  • Diffuse
  • Initial widespread skin involvement
  • Early visceral involvement
  • Rapid course

71
Systemic Sclerosis (Scleroderma)
Things a dentist might see
  • Female between 50-60
  • Raynaud phenomenon
  • Stiff, clawlike fingers
  • Mask-like face
  • Difficulty swallowing
  • Dyspnea, chronic cough
  • Difficulty getting dentures in

72
Systemic Sclerosis (Scleroderma)
Prognosis
  • Steady, slow, downhill course over years
  • Limited scleroderma may exist for decades without
    progressing
  • Diffuse scleroderma is more common and has worse
    prognosis
  • Overall 10-year survival 35-70

73
Myasthenia Gravis
  • Disease marked by progressive weakness and loss
    of muscle control
  • Classified as a B cell Disease
  • Autoantibodies against nicotinic acetylcholine
    receptors
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