* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download PowerPoint
Atherosclerosis wikipedia , lookup
Lymphopoiesis wikipedia , lookup
Psychoneuroimmunology wikipedia , lookup
Molecular mimicry wikipedia , lookup
Immune system wikipedia , lookup
Polyclonal B cell response wikipedia , lookup
Cancer immunotherapy wikipedia , lookup
Adaptive immune system wikipedia , lookup
Adoptive cell transfer wikipedia , lookup
Immunosuppressive drug wikipedia , lookup
Yet Again another Pandemic threat http://www.who.int/csr/disease/avi an_influenza/phase/en/index.html • An influenza pandemic occurs when a new influenza virus appears against which the human population has no immunity, resulting in epidemics worldwide with enormous numbers of deaths and illness. • Outbreaks of influenza in animals, especially when happening simultaneously with annual outbreaks of seasonal influenza in humans, increase the chances of a pandemic, through the merging of animal and human influenza viruses. • During the last few years, the world has faced several threats with pandemic potential, making the occurrence of the next pandemic a matter of time. Some Links • Timeline for vaccine • A fact sheet on swine flue • who Now list this a N1H1 post pandemic period, N1H1 becomes pare of our seasional flue Some Numbers • Many Millions get flue • Each year 200,000 hospitalized • 35,000 die • • • • Mortality rate 0.1% SARS 10% Bird flue up to 90% Swine flue? Is it really 10%? Nonspecific Immunity Resistance don’t get it Susceptibility get it • Nonspecific immunity (innate immunity) are the defenses that protect the body against any pathogen. – Are not normally set up against any particular pathogen. • Adaptive immunity: Immunity, resistance to a specific pathogen An Overview of the Body’s Defenses ANIMATION Host Defenses: The Big Picture Figure 16.1 The Concept of Immunity • Host Toll-like receptors (TLRs) attach to Pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) • TLRs induce cytokines that regulate the intensity and duration of immune responses The skin • Mechanical – – – – Skin Structure Saliva washes Mucus traps and ciliary escalator Urine, vaginal flows out • Chemical – – – – – – Sebum w/ unsaturated fatty acids Perspiration Lysozyme Acid conditions stomak(1.2-3pH) skin (3-5pH) Normal microbiota Transferrins, and NO Physical Factors • Skin • Epidermis consists of tightly packed cells with – Keratin, a protective protein Figure 16.2 Ciliary Escalator Figure 24.7 Ciliary Escalator Figure 16.4 Phagocytosis • Define. • What does this look like? • What does this do? Chemical Factors • Fungistatic fatty acid in sebum • Low pH (3–5) of skin • Lysozyme in perspiration, tears, saliva, and urine • Low pH (1.2–3.0) of gastric juice • Low pH (3–5) of vaginal secretions Normal Microbiota and Innate Immunity • Microbial antagonism/competitive exclusion: Normal microbiota compete with pathogens or alter the environment • Commensal microbiota: One organism (microbe) benefits and the other (host) is unharmed – May be opportunistic pathogens Formed Elements in Blood Red Blood Cells Transport O2 and CO2 White Blood Cells: Neutrophils Phagocytosis Basophiles Histamine Eosinophils Kill parasites Formed Elements in Blood Monocytes Phagocytosis Dendritic cells Phagocytosis Natural killer cells Destroy target cells Formed Elements in Blood T cells Cell-mediated immunity B cells Produce antibodies Platelets Blood clotting Differential White Cell Count • Percentage of each type of white cell in a sample of 100 white blood cells Neutrophils 60–70% Basophils 0.5–1% Eosinophils 2–4% Monocytes 3–8% Lymphocytes 20–25% White Blood Cells • Neutrophils: Phagocytic • Basophils: Produce histamine • Eosinophils: Toxic to parasites, some phagocytosis • Monocytes: Phagocytic as mature macrophages • Fixed macrophages in lungs, liver, bronchi • Wandering macrophages roam tissues • Lymphocytes: Involved in specific immunity Components of Lymphatic System Figure 16.5a The Lymphatic System ANIMATION Host Defenses: Overview Figure 16.5b–c Phagocytosis • Phago: From Greek, meaning eat • Cyte: From Greek, meaning cell • Ingestion of microbes or particles by a cell, performed by phagocytes Figure 16.6 Phagocytosis Figure 16.7 Phagocytosis ANIMATION Phagocytosis: Overview ANIMATION Phagocytosis: Mechanism Microbial Evasion of Phagocytosis Inhibit adherence: M protein, capsules Kill phagocytes: Leukocidins Lyse phagocytes: Membrane attack complex Streptococcus pyogenes, S. pneumoniae Staphylococcus aureus Escape phagosome Shigella, Rickettsia Prevent phagosomelysosome fusion Survive in phagolysosome HIV, Mycobacterium tuberculosis Listeria monocytogenes Coxiella burnettii Actions of phagocytic cells • Neutrophils (granulocyte) phagocyte • Increase in number during infection (leukocytosis) • Neutrophils are most important • Can act as antigen presenting cells (APC) – Important in specific resistance Mechanism of phagocytosis • • • • Chemotaxis to pathogen Adherence Engulfment Killing • Resistance of microbes can be seen in some ability to live even after phagocytosis. Inflammation • • • • • Redness Pain Heat Swelling (edema) Acute-phase proteins activated (complement, cytokine, kinins) • Vasodilation (histamine, kinins, prostaglandins, leukotrienes) • Margination and emigration of WBCs • Tissue repair Chemicals Released by Damaged Cells • Histamine Vasodilation, increased permeability of blood vessels • Kinins Vasodilation, increased permeability of blood vessels • Prostaglandins Intensity histamine and kinin effect • Leukotrienes Increased permeability of blood vessels, phagocytic attachment Fever • Body temp is controlled by the brain • High temp in response to IL-1 • Caused by – Bacterial endotoxins – Interleukin-1 – Chills indicate rising body temp (crisis) Fever • Advantages – Increases transferrins – Increases IL–1 activity – Produces Interferon • Disadvantages – Tachycardia – Acidosis – Dehydration – 44–46°C fatal Antimicrobial substances • IFN- and IFN-: Cause cells to produce antiviral proteins that inhibit viral replication • Gamma IFN: Causes neutrophils and macrophages to phagocytize bacteria • Lysozyme • Acids on skin • Complement Antiviral Actions of Interferons (IFNs) Figure 16.15 Innate Immunity • Transferrins – Bind serum iron • Antimicrobial peptides – Lyse bacterial cells • Deficiencies in complement can result in an increased susceptibility to disease The Complement System • Serum proteins activated in a cascade • Activated by – Antigen-antibody reaction – Proteins C3, B, D, P and a pathogen ANIMATION Complement System: Overview ANIMATION Complement System: Activation The Complement System • C3b causes opsonization • C3a + C5a cause inflammation • C5b + C6 + C7 + C8 + C9 cause cell lysis ANIMATION Complement System: Results The Complement System Figure 16.9 Effects of Complement Activation • Opsonization or immune adherence: Enhanced phagocytosis • Membrane attack complex: Cytolysis • Attract phagocytes Figure 16.10 Inflammation Stimulated by Complement Figure 16.11 Classical Pathway of Complement Activation Figure 16.12 Alternative Pathway of Complement Activation Figure 16.13 Lectin Pathway of Complement Activation Figure 16.14 Some Bacteria Evade Complement • Capsules prevent C activation • Surface lipid-carbohydrates prevent membrane attack complex (MAC) formation • Enzymatic digestion of C5a