Ab formation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Ab formation

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... Virgin cells Memory cells Th cells Cytokines Long Term Memory Kinetics of Ab Response to T-independent Ags 4 Phases IgM antibody No secondary response 1o Ag 2o ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ab formation


1
Ab formation
2
Hallmarks of the Immune Response
  • Self/Non-self Discrimination
  • Memory
  • Specificity

3
Fate of the Immunogen
  • Clearance after 1o exposure
  • Equilibrium phase
  • Catabolic decay phase
  • Immune elimination phase
  • Clearance after 2o exposure
  • More rapid onset of immune elimination phase

4
Kinetics of the Ab ResponseT-dependent Ag 1o
Response
  • Lag phase
  • Log phase
  • Plateau phase
  • Decline phase

5
Kinetics of the Ab ResponseT-dependent Ag 2o
Response
  • Lag phase
  • Log phase
  • Plateau phase
  • Decline phase

Specificity
6
Qualitative Ab Changes during 1o and 2o Responses
  • Class variation
  • 1o - IgM
  • 2o - IgG, IgA or IgE

7
Qualitative Ab Changes during 1o and 2o Responses
  • Class variation
  • Affinity
  • Affinity Maturation

8
Qualitative Ab Changes during 1o and 2o Responses
  • Class variation
  • Affinity
  • Clonal selection
  • Somatic mutation

9
Qualitative Ab Changes during 1o and 2o Responses
  • Class variation
  • Affinity
  • Avidity
  • Cross reactivity

10
Cellular Events in 1o Response to T-dependent Ags
  • Lag
  • Clonal selection
  • Log
  • IgM
  • Class switching
  • Stationary
  • Decline
  • Memory Cell Pool

11
Cellular Events in 2o Response to T-dependent Ags
  • Lag phase
  • Virgin cells
  • Memory cells
  • Log phase
  • Pool size
  • IgG, IgA or IgE
  • Stationary
  • Decline
  • Sustained production

12
Memory T cells
  • T Cells
  • Virgin cells
  • Memory cells
  • Th cells
  • Cytokines
  • Long Term Memory

13
Kinetics of Ab Response toT-independent Ags
  • 4 Phases
  • IgM antibody
  • No secondary response

14
Class Switching
  • DNA rearrangement
  • Antigen dependent
  • Switch site
  • Same VDJ
  • TH cytokines

15
Membrane vs Secreted Ig
  • Differential pre-mRNA processing
  • Membrane exons
  • Alternate polyA sites
  • Same VDJ region used

16
Immunization
17
Milestones in immunization
  • 1500BC
  • Turks introduce variolation
  • 3000BC
  • Evidence of sniffing powdered small pox crust in
    Egypt
  • 1700AD
  • Introduction of variolation in England and later
    in the US
  • 2000BC
  • Sniffing of small pox crust in China

18
Introduction of variolation
  • The wife of the British Ambassador in
  • Turkey, in March 1717 wrote, following
  • the variolation of her son, to a friend in
  • England The small pox, so fatal, so general
  • amongst us, is entirely harmless here
  • by the invention of ingrafting.I am
  • patriot enough to bring this invention into
  • fashion in England.

19
Milestones in immunization
  • 1780AD
  • Edward Jenner discovers small pox vaccine

20
Edward Jenner
Discovery of small pox vaccine
21
Edward JennerAmong patients awaiting small pox
vaccination
22
Modern era of the vaccine
  • 1934
  • Pertussis
  • 1885
  • Rabies vaccine (Pasteur)
  • 1955
  • Salk polio
  • 1920s
  • Diphtheria and Tetanus

23
Modern era of the vaccine
  • 1960s
  • Mumps measles and rubella virus
  • Sabin polio
  • 1985
  • Haemophilus
  • 1990s
  • Hepatitis and varicella
  • 2000
  • Human Papillomavirus
  • (HPV)

24
Pre- post-vaccine incidence of common
preventable diseases
25
Different modes of acquiring immunity
Immunity
26
Passive Immunity
  • Placental transfer of IgG
  • Antibodies or immunoglobulins
  • Colostral transfer of IgA
  • Immune cells

27
Passive Immunization
28
Advantages and Disadvantages of Passive
Immunization
  • no long term protection
  • serum sickness
  • immediate protection
  • risk of hepatitis and Aids
  • graft vs. host disease (cell graft only)

29
Active Immunization
  • Attenuated organisms
  • killed organisms
  • exposure to sub-clinical infections
  • sub-cellular fragments
  • toxins
  • others

30
Live Attenuated Vaccines
  • polio
  • not used in std. schedule
  • hepatitis A
  • standard 2006
  • measles, mumps rubella
  • yellow fever
  • Military and travelers
  • Varicella zoster
  • children with no history of chicken pox
  • Influenza
  • selected age group (5-49)
  • tuberculosis
  • not used in this country

31
Killed Whole-Organism Vaccines
  • polio
  • Q fever
  • population at risk
  • influenza
  • elderly and at risk
  • typhoid, cholera, plague
  • epidemics and travelers
  • pertussis
  • replaced by the acellular vaccine
  • rabies
  • post exposure

32
Microbial Fragment Vaccines
  • Bordetella. Pertussis
  • virulence factor protein
  • Haemophilus influenzae B
  • protein conjugated polysaccharide
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae
  • Polysaccharide mixture
  • Neisseria meningitidis
  • polysaccharide

33
Microbial Fragment Vaccines
  • Clostridium tetani (tetanus)
  • inactivated toxin (toxoid)
  • Corynebacterium diphtheriae
  • inactivated toxin (toxoid)
  • Vibrio cholerae
  • toxin subunits
  • Hepatitis B virus
  • cloned in yeast

34
Modification of Toxin to Toxoid
Toxin
35
Future Vaccines
  • anti-Idiotype Vaccine
  • DNA
  • Immuno-dominant peptide

36
anti-Idiotype Vaccine
37
Antiidiotype antibody in tolerance
Antiidiotype antibody production
Antiidiotype mediated tolerance
38
Adjuvants
Human use
Mode of action
Adjuvant type
  • Salts
  • Al(OH)3 AlPO4 CaPO4
  • Be(OH)2

Yes Yes No
Slow release of antigen TLR interaction and
cytokine induction
  • Mineral oils without bacteria

Slow release of antigen
No
  • Bacteria in Mineral oils (Mycobacteria, Nocardia)

Slow release of antigen TLR interaction and
cytokine induction
Yes
No
39
Adjuvants
Human use
Mode of action
Adjuvant type
  • Bacteria
  • Bordetella pertussis
  • Mycobacterium bovis
  • (BCG and others)

Yes
TLR interaction and cytokine induction
No
  • Bacterial products
  • Myramyl peptides

TLR interaction and cytokine induction
No
  • Synthetic polymers
  • Liposomes
  • ISCOM
  • Poly-lactate

Slow release of antigen
No
40
Adjuvants
Human use
Mode of action
Adjuvant type
  • Poly-nucleotides
  • CpG

TLR interaction and cytokine induction
No
  • Cytokines
  • IL-1, IL-2, IL-12, IFN-?, etc.

Activation of T and B cells and APC
No
Used in experimental immunotherapy of human
malignancies
41
Recommended Childhood Immunization Schedule
Recommended age range
Catch-up immunization
Certainigh risk groups
MMWR, 55 Jan 5, 2007
42
Recommended Immunization Schedule for Ages 7-18
Recommended age range
Catch-up immunization
Certain high risk groups
MMWR, 55 Jan 5, 2007
43
Recommended Immunization Schedule for Ages 7-18
Recommended age range
Catch-up immunization
Certain high risk groups
MMWR, 55 Jan 5, 2007
44
Adverse Events OccurringWithin 48 Hours DTP of
Vaccination
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