Title: Janeway's Immunology
1Immune Responses to Pathogens
- Bacteria
- Viruses
- Fungi
- Parasites
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9Different Phases of an Immune Response
10Natural Barriers to Infection
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12Innate Responses to Extracellular Bacteria
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14Bacteria that express mannose on their surface
may bind mannose -binding lectin
Opsonization and enhanced phagocytosis of the
bacteria
15Peptidoglycan in the cell wall activates the
alternative pathway of complement
16LPS in the cell wall activates the alternative
pathway of Complement in absence of Ab
17Immediate Responses to extracellular pathogens
18Toll-like receptors recognize specific properties
of pathogens
19Membrane attack complex lyses bacteria and
complement by-products participate in
inflammatory responses
20Tissue macrophage and dendritic cells are the
first leukocytes to encounter extracellular
pathogens
21Inflammatory mediators recruit leukocytes from
the blood into the tissues
22Intracellular vesicles of macrophage contain
multiple products to inhibit or kill bacteria
23Adaptive Immune Responses to Extracellular
Bacteria
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25Adaptive Immune Responses to Extracellular
Bacteria
- Macrophage activation capable of causing tissue
injury - DTH to microbial protein antigens (PPD) of M.
tuberculosis - Persist for long periods and cause chronic
antigenic stimulation and T cell macrophage
activation - May result in formation of granulomas surrounding
the microbes - Granulomatous inflammation
- May serve to localize and prevent spread of the
microbes associated with severe functional
impairment caused by tissue necrosis and fibrosis
26Functions of Antibodies
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30Immunity to Intracellular Bacteria
- Innate
- Phagocytes and NK cells
- Pathogenic intracellular bacteria are resistant
to degradation within phagocytes - NK cells become activated by IL-12 produced by
macrophage
- Adaptive
- Cell-mediated immunity
- Consists of 2 types of reactions-macrophage
activation by the T cell-derived signals CD40
ligand and IFN-? - Lysis of infected cells by cytolytic T lymphocytes
31Cooperation of CD4 and CD8 T cells in defense
against intracellular microbes
CD4 helper T cell
CD8 cytotoxic T cell
CD40L
Killing of infected cell
MHC Class II
CD40
IFN-?
MHC Class I
Killing of bacteria in phagolysosome
Phagocytosed bacteria in vesicles cytoplasm
32Virus-infected cell
33Injurious Responses to Bacteria
- Septic shock syndrome characterized by
circulatory collapse and disseminated
intravascular coagulation - Caused primarily by TNF-alpha
34Bacterial Superantigens
- Superantigens bind to class II MHC molecules on
APCs - At site away from peptide binding cleft
- Possess 2 binding sites for class II MHC molecules
- Stimulate large numbers of T cells but not all T
cells - Staph A produce enterotoxins (exotoxins) SEA,
SEB, SEC, SED, and SEE, most common form of food
poisoning - TSST-1
- Most potent naturally occurring T cell mitogens
known - Enterotoxins bind to the V? region of the T cell
receptor
35Viral Superantigens
- Viral gene products may also function as
superantigens
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37Mechanisms of Immune Evasion by Bacteria
38Immune Response to Viruses
- Innate Immunity
- Type I interferons
- NK Cells
- Natural Antibodies
- Specific Immunity
- B cell- and T cell-mediated
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Days after viral infection
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41Action of IFN-a/b
- Activated by viral double-stranded RNA
- NK cell cytotoxicity is activated whenever the
IFN-a/b cytokines are induced - Increase expression of IL-12 receptors
- Stimulates the development of TH1 cells
42NK Cells
- Phylogenetically primitive CTLs that lack TCR for
antigen recognition - Antiviral Functions of NK cells
- Cytotoxicity activated by
- Arenaviruses (lymphocytic choriomeningitis
virus), - Herpesviruses (herpes simplex virus)
- Orthomyxoviruses (influenza virus)
- Picornaviruses (coxsackie virus)
43IL-12
- Induces NK cell IFN-g production
- Macrophage activation--gtkilling of microbes
- Contributes to preferential development of T
helper type I cells (IFN-g-producing cells) - Enhances the cytolytic functions of activated T
lymphocytes (CTLs).
44Antibody-dependent cell mediated cytotoxicity
(ADCC)
45Antibody Response
- Immunological Discrimination B cells
- Neutralizing antibody responses against viruses
prevent re-infection against the most important
acute cytopathic human viruses, polio, measles,
mumps - In several model of infections, the absence of B
cells or CD4 T helper cells (or both) results in
impaired virus clearance and death - Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) in mice
46Ways that Ig neutralizes viruses
- Inhibit attachment and uptake
- Bulky Ab can hinder adhesion
- Agglutinate viruses
47IgA Antibodies
- Largely secreted as dimers by plasma cells that
underlie the mucosal epithelium
J-chain
48Secretory IgA
Lumen
Apical Recycling endosome
Epithelial Cell
nucleus
Poly-Ig receptor
Lamina Propria
49T cell-mediated responses to viruses
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52Non-cytolytic viruses
- CTLs may be responsible for tissue injury
- i.e. LCMV infection in mice
- During some generalized infections with
non-cytopathic viruses (LCMV) in mice and
Hepatitis B or C in humans, all antigen-specific
T cells may be deleted
53Role of TH cells in viral clearance
CD4 helper T cell
cytokines
CD40L
CD8 T cell
MHC Class II
CD40
Activation
MHC Class I
54Mechanism for degrading viral RNA
IFN-g/TNF-a
AAAAAAAAAAAAA
Pre-formed HBV RNA
endonuclease
55Immunological Memory
- Poorly understood
- Mediated by increased antibody levels
- Necessary, but also sufficient, to provide
protection against cytopathic virus infections - Transfer of memory antibodies from mother to
offspring
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58- CTL Memory
- Lack of transfer of T cell memory from mother to
child, T cell receptor expression requires a
learning process - CTLs are induced and disappear rapidly
- CD8 T cell frequencies are low in a normal host
59Evasion of Immune Mechanisms
- Viruses capable of great antigenic variation
- Infect cells of the immune system, impairing
their function - Mimic cellular genes
- EBV protein BCRF1-an analog of cellular IL-10,
similar to that of human IL-10
60Immune Responses to Fungi
61May live in extracellular tissue and within
phagocytes
1. Often occur in immunocompromised individuals
2. Immune responses often combinations of the
responses to extracellular and intracellular
bacteria
62Principal mediators of innate immunity against
fungi are neutrophils and macrophages.
Cell-mediated immunity is the major mechanism of
adaptive immunity against fungal infections TH1
responses are protective and TH2 responses are
detrimental to the host
63Immunity to Parasites
- Protozoas
- Helminths
- Ectoparasites (ticks and mites)
- Malaria infects more than 100 million people
worldwide
64Innate Immunity to Parasites
- Primary response is phagocytosis
- Many parasites resistant to phagocytic killing
and may replicate within macrophages
65Adaptive Immunity to Parasites
- Cell mediated immunity particularly macrophage
activation by TH1 cell-derived cytokines