Title: Lecture 22 Autoimmunity
1Lecture 22Autoimmunity
2Autoimmune Disease
- Self tolerance is lost
- Specific adaptive immune responses mounted
against self antigens - Inability to eliminate antigen leads to chronic
inflammatory process - Ehrlich termed this horror autotoxicus
3Autoimmune diseases mediated by cytotoxic
antibodies (Type II)
4Autoimmune diseases mediated by immune complexes
(Type III)
5Autoimmune diseases mediated by T-cells (Type IV)
6Autoimmune disease susceptibility
- Genetic predisposition
- Twin studies (Diabetes 20 monozygotic vs. 5
dizigotic) - Family studies
- Association with MHC genotype
- HLA genotyping
7Genetic organization of the MHC in humans and the
mouse
8Detailed map of the human MHC region
9Association between HLA and susceptibility to
autoimmune disease
10Population studies show association of
susceptibility to insulin-dependent diabetes
mellitus (IDDM) with HLA genotype
11Family studies show strong linkage of
susceptibility to insulin-dependent diabetes
mellitus (IDDM) with HLA genotype
12Autoimmunity involves T cells
- Ability of a T cell to respond is determined by
MHC genotype - It has been hypothesized that susceptibility to
an autoimmune disease is determined by
differences in the ability of allelic variants of
MHC molecules to present autoantigenic peptides - Alternatively, self peptides may drive the
positive selection of developing thymocytes that
are specific for particular autoantigens.
13Levels of autoantigens may drive T cell selection
- If antigens are expressed at too low a level,
they may not drive negative intrathymic
selection, but sufficient to drive positive
selection - Insulin genes transcribed at high level in thymus
protect against diabetes
14Peripheral B-cell anergy
15Elimination of autoreactive B cells in germinal
centers
16Several ways in which infectious agents could
break self tolerance
17Association of infection with autoimmune disease
18Some body sites are immunologically priviledged
19Damage to an immunologically privileged site can
induce an autoimmune response
20Sjögrens Syndrome
- Chronic autoimmune disorder
- Major clinical manifestations resulting from
changes in exocrine glands
21Forms 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
22Features 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
23Is 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?
24Evidence 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
25Polyclonal 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
26Other 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
27Histopathology
- 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
28Classical 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
29Salivary Gland Structure
30(No Transcript)
31Conclusion
- 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