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Immunology Review – Quiz 1 CONCEPTS IN IMMUNITY o Background o Goal of immune system: battle infection o Leukocytes: interact as network to attack microorganisms o Microbes can be intracellular (invade cells) or extracellular (grow on tissues) o Host defense mechanisms External defenses (e.g. physical barriers) Innate immunity: non-specific molecules/cells Adaptive immunity: specific molecules/cells o Components of the immune system o Leukocytes: 3 types of lymphocytes (B, T, large granular lymphocyte) myeloid derived cells (monocytes/macrophages, granulocytes) o Hematopoietic stem cells o Hematopoietic cells derived from common stem cell in bone marrow o Self-renewing o Differentiate in response to cytokines, other signals o Important definitions o Antigen: reacts with antibodies (foreign pathogen/particle) o Immunogen: antigen that induces immune response (e.g. protein, na, carb, lipid) o Hapten: small molecule that can’t induce Ig alone (e.g. penicillin); can if attached to larger protein o Passive immunity: established by transfer of Ig or lymphocytes (provided to patients) o Active immunity: result of host cells’ response to antigen (e.g. vaccination) o Humoral immunity: mediated by Ig o Cellular immunity: mediated by cells o Specific immunity: protects against specific antigen that elicits response o Non-specific immunity: protects against many types of antigens (usually related) o Immunological memory/secondary response: specific response to previously-encountered antigen o Cytokines: small proteins that signal between cells Membrane-bound or soluble Autocrine or paracrine Bind to specific receptors Know: IL-1,2,4,5,10,12; TNF-alpha, beta; IFN-alpha/beta, gamma; chemokines o CD: cluster designation for cell suface molecules (see CD chart) o Immune receptors: recognizing danger o Pattern recognition receptors 1 Bind to patterns on microorganisms and their products Macrophages, DCs, epithelial cells, etc. Nonspecific (bind to similar molecules on diff organisms) Innate o Immunoglobulin (Ig) One specific antigen B cells o T cell receptors (TCR) One specific peptide and MHC T cells o Fc receptors (FcR) Bind to Ig Allow cells to use specificity of Ig to direct function NK, macrophage, PMN, Eos, mast cells o Innate immunity: first cells to respond o Mechanisms present prior to infection o Sentinels that find infection near site of entry o Acute phase proteins/complement, macrophages, PMNs, NK cells, epithelial/endothelial cells o Phases of immune response ----------------------------------- o Recognition of antigen o Activation of immune cells o Clonal expansion o Effector phase o Decline after antigen is cleared o Memory cells o Antigen presentation: recognizing pathogen presence o Antigen-presenting cells (APCs): macrophages, B cell, dendritic cell o Small peptides presented with MHCs on APC surface o T cells recognize specific MHC-peptide complex with TCR o Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) o Bind small proteins and present them to TCR o Class I: all nucleated cells; present internal proteins o Class II: on APCs; present external proteins o Adaptive immunity: specific response o Lymphocytes with highly specific receptors (Ig, TCR) o Specificity o Memory o Clonal selection o Lymphocytes exist in pools of clones Each clone specific for single antigen o Clone activates when bound to antigen divides a lot Differentiation to effector cells, memory cells o Receptor cross-linking o Must trigger several antigen-specific receptors at once to get cell response o Receptors localize near each other to bind to antigen on cell surface, bringing signaling molecules close together response o Ig can be use to mimic this process 2 o Two signals for immune cell activation o Prevents inappropriate activation o 1: via immune receptor (Ig, TCR) o 2: via costimulatory signal (general signal induced by presence of pathogen) o Antibodies: response to remove pathogen; humoral o Made by plasma cells (from B cells) o Multiple sites for same antigen o 2 heavy chains, 2 light chains o Fab portion: antigen binding o Fc portion: effector region o 5 classes: Ig-M,D,G,A,E o T cells: response to remove pathogen; cell-mediated o Lymphocytes, develop in thymus o Specific TCR o Activate humoral response o 3 types cytotoxic (CTL): CD8, cytokines helper (Th): CD4, lots of cytokines Th1: interact with macrophages, inflammation, development of CTLs Th2: interact with B cells, promote Ig making Th17: autoimmunity, inflammation regulatory (Treg): suppress T cell activity in periphery, prevent autoimmunity o Immunological memory o On second exposure to antigen, response is faster and more effective o Antigen-specific memory lymphocytes in higher numbers, easier to activate o Lymphoid tissue and trafficking: linking antigens and lymphocytes o Primary lymphoid tissue: where lymphocytes develop (marrow, thymus) o Secondary lymphoid tissue: where mature lymphocytes reside (spleen, nodes, tonsils, etc.) o DCs pick up antigens in periphery and bring to node via lymphatic drainage o DCs present antigen to lymphocyte in node o Tolerance: avoiding immune response to “self” antigens o Removes/inhibits lymphocyte receptors for normal proteins o What to know: o Cells of immune system o Antigen o Key cytokines and CDs o Adaptive versus innate immunity o Clonal selection and expansion o Antigen presentation o 2-signal system o Immunological memory o Lymphoid organs INNATE IMMUNITY o External defenses o Physical barriers: microbes must pass skin/epithelial cells actively or passively o Secretions: sweat, tears, saliva, gastric fluid have antimicrobial substances o Microbial products/competition: non-pathogenic bacteria (commensals) on epithelial surfaces 3 o Soluble molecules: mediate protection against microbes before adaptive immunity develops o Complement 20 interdependent proteins sequential activation inflammation, attract neutrophils (chemotaxis), help attach microbes to phagocytes (opsonization), kill microbe activation is direct by microbes (alternative path) or by Ig bound to antigen (classical path) o Acute phase proteins Plasma proteins Innate defense against microbes (esp bacteria) Limit tissue damage cause by disease/infections Maximize activation of complement, opsonization Produced in liver in response to microbe or cytokines (IL-1/6, TNF-alpha/gamma) o Interferons (IFN) Protect against viral infections (interfere with replication) Signaling molecules btwn cells Type I (alpha, beta): made by lots of cells; inhibit protein synth in infected cells Type II (gamma): leukocytes (Th1, NK); regulates Th1 response, increases phagocytosis and antigen presentation o Collectins: carb binding proteins; act as opsonins (help macrophage destroy microbe) o Peptide antibiotics: produced by lots of cells (e.g. epithelial, phagocytic) o Innate immunity cellular receptors/pattern recognition receptors o Innate immune cells have receptors to recognize pathogens o Germ-line encoded no gene rearrangements for expression o No memory response o Activation of receptors costimulation (signal 2) of lymphocytes o Types (one cell can have many types) Mannose receptors On macrophages, DCs, endothelial Bind to mannosyl/fucosyl carbs eat microbe peptides on MHC T and B response CD14 On macrophages Binds LPS on gram neg bacteria Helps destroy microbes, induce secretion of cytokines that trigger adaptive immunity Scavenger receptors On macrophages Recognize carbs, lipids in bacteria and yeast cell walls Toll-like receptors (TLR) Cell surface or vesicles Recognize patterns on multiple pathogens signal presence of pathogen expression of costimulatory molecules and cytokines needed for adaptive response 4 o NODs are similar to TLR but in cytoplasm (involved in Crohn’s disease) Innate versus adaptive immune receptors ----------------------- o Macrophages o Aka phagocytes; eat particles and dying cells o Derived from monocytes in blood o Differentiate in different tissues (mononuclear phag system) Kupffer—liver Mesangial—kidney Alveolar—lungs Microglial—brain o Secrete cytokines to activate immune cells o Can be activated to kill bacteria o Phagocytosis ------------------------------------------------------------------- Attraction to site of infection via chemotaxic signals MDP, C Interaction with microbe for easier ingestion (opsonization) Mannose, C, Fc receptors Ingestion/endocytosis (invagination of membrane) Fusion of phagosome and lysosome (microtubules) Killing ingested material (O2 dependent/independent) Reactive O2 intermediates (ROI) Nitric oxide (NO) Lysosomal proteases Upregulated by IFN-gamma Digested pieces released inflammation, recruit PMNs o Activation of macrophages to (can interchange based on stimuli): Pro-inflammatory (classical): kill microbes through phag Wound-healing: produce ECM, alter cytokine production, suppress lymphocyte expansion Regulatory (anti-inflammatory) 5 o Dendritic cells o Immature DCs sit in tissues and phagocytose particles to sample environment o Mature when encounter microbe signal (via TLR or TNF-alpha) upregulate MHCI/II on surface can’t phag anymore, move to nodes to present to T cells, activate antigen-specific T cells o Subtypes for different T cell types o Different names for DCs Langerhans (LH)—skin Interdigitating (IDC)—lymph node T cell areas Follicular dendritic cells (FDC)—B cell follicles of lymph tissues o Possible immunotherapy o Neutrophils/polymorphonuclear cells (PMN) o Major leukocyte in the blood o Granules with enzymes that kill bacteria o Short life span (hours/days) o Have Fc receptors o Move through blood till they get signal to move to tissue: selectin on endothelial cells Inflammation induces selectin expression E.g due to TNF-alpha from macrophage PMNs slow down and roll ---------------------------- Sensitive to inflammation signals (C5a, LPS) causes PMN to upregulate integrins on surface bind to ICAMS on endothelium move into tissue by chemotaxis due to chemokine gradients move to infection and kill microbe o Natural killer (NK, LGL) cells o In many tissues and blood o Make and release cytokines (inc IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, GM-CSF) for virus and tumor killing, activating macrophages o Can kill cells Perforin granules Fas-Fas ligand TNF (cytokine) release o No TCR or Ig o Express Fc receptors o Help with antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) o NK activating receptors bind to molecules on stressed/tumor/virus-infected cells Turns on NK killing and cytokine production o NK inhibitory receptors bind to MHCI and shut of NK to protect normal cells Tumor/virus-infected cells sometimes dec MHCI to avoid T cells, but then NK can kill them o Mast cells (CT) and basophils (circulation) o Fc receptors for IgE o Triggered by specific antigens o Degranulate when activated release pharmacological mediators Histamine: vasodilation, vascular permeability Cytokines TNF-alpha, IL-8/5: attract neutrophils, eosinophils platelet activating factor: attract basophils o Eosinophils o Production induced by IL-5 in marrow o Granules involved in inflammation 6 o o o o o o Attack parasites that can’t be phagocytosed with major basic protein o Related to allergies Platelets o Release mediators that activate complement attraction of leukocytes o Granules with chemokines, growth factors Interaction between innate immune cells: network o Macrophages make cytokines (TNFalpha) activates its own IL-12 production, recruits PMNs o IL-12 NK cells make IFN-gamma makes macrophages better killers, upregulates IL-2 receptors on NK so they proliferate o TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, IL-12 also activate T cell immunity!! Resistance to innate immunity o Organisms can become resistant to phag, ROS, complement, antimicrobial peptide Innate versus adaptive immunity o Innate cells/molecules often present at infection site when it occurs o Innate works rapidly acute inflammation o Adaptive takes longer and is highly specific for the microbe’s antigens o Adaptive system shows memory so next response is more rapid o Adaptive is specific, but doesn’t know “bad” from “good/benign” – innate system decides whether to attack What to know o Know the different levels of innate immune defense: physical, soluble molecules, cells o Know the characteristics of the different cells of the innate immune system o Characteristics and function of innate immune receptors o Functions of immature and mature dendritic cells. o Role of class I in NK cell recognition o Understand the differences between innate and adaptive immunity o Understand the role of innate defenses in activating adaptive immune defenses ANTIBODIES/IMMUNOGLOBULINS o Basics o Antigen due to vaccination/infection inc Ig specific to it o Plasma, extravascular spaces, secretions o Glycoproteins o Bind antigens with high specificity, affinity o Made by B cells o 5 classes: G, A, M, D, E o Basic structure o 4 polypeptide chain unit covalently bonded o 2 identical light (L) chains 2 kinds: kappa κ, lambda λ o 2 identical heavy (H) chains 5 kinds (define Ig classes): M--µ. D--δ. G--γ. E--ε. A--α o L bound to H via disulfide and non-covalent hydrophobic/hydrophilic interactions 7 o o o Symmetrical: allelic exclusion – inhibition of the other Ig genes in the B cell making a specific Ig L and H have disulfide loop every 90 aa’s o polypeptide loop domains of 110 aa’s VH, VL, CH1, CH2, CH3 domains each with diff function VH + VL: binding site for antigen CH2-CH2: complement fixation o Characteristic of Ig superfamily Fab fragment: N-term half of H chain and all of L chain o Antigen binding site: N quarter of H and N half of L Binds to antigenic determinant Variable region of Ig o Constant regions CH1 All Ig of same class/subclass have same aa sequence in constant regions o Fc region: C-term half of H chain o Constant regions CH2, CH3 o Determines effector function of Ig Combines Ig with complement Binds to certain types of cells at FcR o Fc receptors (FcR) Many types of cells o IgG FcR: monocytes, granulocytes, lymphocytes (not RBC) o IgA FcR: monocytes, granulocytes (esp mucosal) o IgE FcR: mast cells, basophils (involved in degranulation) o Antibody valence, affinity, avidity o Valence: max number antigenic determinants Ig can interact with E.g. 2 Fab sites can bind to 2 molecules antigen or 2 identical site on same antigen o Affinity: tightness of bond between Ig binding aite and antigenic determinant Kd, dissociation constant (higher = more likely to dissociate) o Avidity: combined effect of valence and affinity Higher valence higher affinity due to more bond sites o Antigens: fits in Ig pocket via non-covalent bonding o Innate system recognizes molecule patterns common to microbes o Adaptive system recognizes specific antigens on a microbe o Protein, lipid, carb, na o Ig binds to native antigen (how it is in nature) o Must be unique enough to induce immune response o Often several diff antigenic determinants (epitopes) per antigen multideterminant Ig binds to this (can have multiple diff Ig’s if determinant is non-identical) Protein: 3-6 aa’s; Carb: 5-6 sugar molecules o Carbs tend to have repeating sugar units several identical determinants o Antibody classes (isotypes) o IgG o 150kD (small, so gets into tissues) o vascular, extravascular, and secretions o most abundant Ig in blood o most immunity for blood borne microbes o crosses placenta passive immunity to fetus 8 o 4 subclasses with diff H chain sequences (1-4) bind to diff FcR o long half-life good protection FcRn binds to IgG at low pH when IgG gets to endosome and recycles it o Requires help to activate complement o IgM o 900kD (big!) mostly in vascular space/serum, not tissue o First Ig expressed on B cell Normal 4-chain unit o Also soluble in blood 5 5-chain units held together J chain causes polymerization o Activates complement well (on its own) o 10 binding sites per molecule high overall avidity important since IgM is first in immune response; must act until IgG is ready o IgA o Vascular 170kD normal 4-chain unit o Also major Ig in secretions (colostrum, milk, saliva) also has secretory component (SC) and joining chain (J chain) o SC: transepithelial transport, protection from degradation o J chain: holds units together via disulfides 420kD dimer made locally by plasma cells in mammary and salivary glands and resp, GI, GU tracts transported through epithelial cells to lumen o Defense against microbes at mucosal surfaces o 2 subclasses o IgD o Low quantities vascular o Antigen receptor on B cells Naïve B cells have IgM and IgD for the same antigen Antigens internalized when bound presented on surface to T cell T cell signals B to proliferate and become plasma cell plasma makes lots of Ig o IgE o o o o o Very low quantities vascular Acute inflammation Protection from worm infections Allergies, hay fever, asthma (hypersensitivity) Mast cells with IgE Antigen binds mast cells releases histamine o Allotypes and idiotypes o Allotypes o Genetic markers on Ig’s that differ between individuals o Often single aa differences on L or H chain o immunogenic when injected into individual that doesn’t have the allotype 9 o don’t affect function of Ig Idotypes o Unique antigenic determinants in the antigen binding site o Ig’s can be made against them when injected into other animals o Each B cell clone expresses same idotype (produces single type of Ig) o IgM versus IgG o Neutralizing virus/toxins: IgM is better since it has 10 binding sites o Wider distribution: IgG, since it’s smaller and can get into tissues o Long-term protection: IgG due to long half-life o Interaction with innate components: IgM can activate complement on its own, IgG requires 2 molecules o What to know o Know the different antibody isotypes and subclasses. o Be able to describe antibody structure and know how this relates to different functions o Know where different antibody isotypes are found o Understand the basic nature of an antigen and its epitope (what is recognized) o Understand the unique features of each isotype that relate to its specific function o Know the differences between isotypes, allotypes and idiotypes o ANTIBODY-ANTIGEN REACTIONS o Basics o Interaction is non-covalent: H-bonding, electrostatic, Van Der Waals, hydrophobic o Better fit tighter bonding o Interaction is reversible Mass action: K = [Ab—Ag]/[Ab][Ag] o Types of antigen-Ig reactions o Agglutination: antigen particle plus specific Ig aggregation of particle o Precipitation: soluble antigen plus specific Ig insoluble lattice formation o Complement activation: antigen in solution/on cell plus specific IgG or IgM complement inactivation o Cytolysis: cell plus anti-cell Ig plus complement lysis of cell o Opsonization: antigenic particle plus Ig plus complement enhanced phag o Neutralization: toxins/viruses/hormones plus specific Ig inactivation o Antigens o Microbes have lots of surface molecules each with many antigenic determinants Some elicit stronger responses than others (based on health, age, genetics) o Haptens (e.g. Penicillin): small molecules that can’t elicit Ig response unless attached to larger molecules (carriers) o Cross-reactivity o Similar/identical antigenic determinant on multiple molecules or cells (shared epitope) o Cross-reactive antigen may not bind to Ig quite as well o E.g. people have Ig’s to blood type antigens other than their own bc they’re similar to carb antigens on some microbes o May explain natural/innate Ig’s to a variety of molecules o Autoimmune (e.g. group A strep infection rheumatic fever; strep antigens similar to heart muscle) o Precipitation: antigenic particles initially soluble o Anti-hapten Ig plus hapten soluble complex o Anti-hapten Ig plus protein with many haptens attached insoluble complex o Lattice formation: if protein has several hapten determinants, Ig can bind to more than one antigen (hapten) at a time 10 Leads to precipitation Adding hapten to anti-hapten Ig before adding hapten-protein conjugate inhibits precipitation o Level of precipitation Antibody excess zone: lattice doesn’t develop, soluble Equivalence zone: maximum precipitation; no antigen or Ig detected in supernatant Antigen excess zone: lattice doesn’t develop, soluble o Protein antigens don’t usually have repeating sequences 1 determinant of a particular kind per protein antigen So, there are usually multiple Ig’s formed for each protein antigen (specific to its diff determinants) So, lattice formation doesn’t occur for most soluble proteins (unless it has repeats) o Agglutination: linking insoluble antigenic particles o Interaction of surface antigens on insoluble particles (e.g. cells) with antigen-specific Ig o Need much less Ig than for precipitation Clinical uses: Blood type If bacteria is present in blood o IgM is more efficient at it than IgG bc it has 10 binding sites o Sometimes Ig binding to cell doesn’t cause agglutination Use second Ig reactive to first Ig Coombs test Identifying patients with hemolytic anemia Use Ig reactive to human Ig causes agglutination of RBCs if human Ig is bound to RBCs Or indirectly: add patient serum to cells and then add mouse or rabbit anti-human Ig to detect circulating Ig reactive to cell surface Ig o Results in bigger circle on plates o Monoclonal antibodies o Making monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) Fuse immortal cell (myeloma tumor cell) with specific Ig-producing B cell from immunized animal/human hybridoma cell Hybridoma cell is immortal and makes specific mAbs Used for clinical applications o Fv libraries to make mAbs Get mRNA for Vh and Vl regions from lots of B cells Use the mRNA to make cDNA for each H chain V region and randomly join it with cDNA for each L chain V region produces genes with lots of diff antigen combining sites (Fv regions) Clone the Fv’s into cells source for specific mAbs o Antigen-Antibody assays used clinically o Background Antigen on cell can be detected via labeled Ig Radioisotopes, fluorescein, enzymes o Radioimmunoassay (RIA) Measure serum level of Ig to a specific antigen Add antigen to wells wash add test Ig wash detect with radiolabeled ligand that binds to Ig o Enzyme-linked immunoabsorbent assays (ELISA) Like RIA, but ligand is coupled to enzyme (e.g. peroxidase) 11 Bind ligand to test Ig wash detect by adding substrate that reacts with enzyme color RadioAllergoSorbent Test (RAST) Like RIA, but measures antigen-specific IgE with radiolabeled anti-IgE o Antigen detection Competitive assay: Ig on plate add test antigen (serum) and labeled antigen test antigen will out-compete labeled if it’s present Two-site capture assay (more common): capturing Ig on plate add test antigen (serum) binds to capturing Ig add labeled Ig binds to other site on test antigen o ELISPOT: for cells that produce cytokines Cytokine-specific Ig on plate add activated T cells T cells secrete cytokines cytokines bind to Ig add second cytokine-specific Ig that’s labeled with enzyme colored precipitate o Mistakes during antigen detection Caused by heterophillic Ig (HA) – anti-animal human Ig False positives: HA bridges test Ig and labeled Ig via Fc or Fb regions False negatives: Anti-idiotype HA steric hindrance: HA blocks test-Ig binding sites by binding to Fab Anti-isotype HA steric hindrance: HA blocks test-Ig binding sites by binding to Fc Antigen binding HA steric hindrance: HA binds to antigen so it can’t bind to test Ig o Flow cytometry Bind labeled Ig to cells in suspension run through flow cytometer cytometer measures fluorescence of each cell If labeled Ig cells are run through fluorescence-activated cells sorter (FACS), cells get separated into diff tubes based on their brightness Use to test for cancer types with blood cancer o Immunohistochemistry (IHC) Detect antigens on histological specimens Bind labeled Ig to tissue section wash detect expression via fluorescence or enzymes Advantage: detect antigen within complex tissue Counterstain all/adjacent cells and tissues to get location of antigen Use to test for cancer types with solid tumors o What to know o Understand the basic nature of antigen-antibody reactions o Know the difference between a hapten and an immunogen o Understand cross-reactivity and the consequences of it o Know requirements for lattice formation and precipitation o Know what a Coombs test is o Know what monoclonal antibodies are and their uses o Be familiar with the basic concepts involved in antigen-antibody assays, including RIA, RAST, ELISA, and flow cytometry o ANTIGEN PROCESSING AND PRESENTATION o Immune system must monitor for pathogens inside and outside cells o Outside: bacteria, protozoa, worms, fungi o Inside: viruses, bacteria, protozoa, tumors o Monitor outside via Ig o Hard to get at the inside ones small pieces of proteins inside cells (peptides) are presented on surface via MHC o MHC-peptide complex scanned by TcR 12 o o o o o o If TcR binds MHC-peptide complex AND gets costimulatory signals, T cell responds proliferation, cytokine production, differentiation MHC Class I pathway: presentation to CD8 T cells (CTL) – kill virus-infected cells ---- o Occurs in all nucleated cells o Proteosome: protein complex that degrades defective cellular proteins in cytoplasm for reuse During immune response, proteosome changes shape better makes peptides that have better fit with MHC I o Transporters associated with antigen processing (TAP): Brings peptides into ER o In the ER: peptides associate with MHC I exported to cell surface o Cell surface: MHC-peptide complex recognized by CD8 T cells MHC Class II pathway: present to CD4 helper T cells – interact with DC, macro, B cell o Occurs in antigen presenting cells (APC) – macrophage, B cell, dendritic cell o APC phagocytoses extracellular proteins Macrophage and DC take up lots of antigens via nonspecific receptors B cell takes up specific antigen via specific Ig B cell activation o Endocytic/lysosomal vesicles: pathogen proteins broken into peptides o MHC II fuses with endocytic vesicle and gets loaded with peptide MHC II is assembled in ER but doesn’t take up peptides there (MHC I does) Invariant chain blocks binding pocket of MHC II when in ER Invariant chain degraded in endosome, leaving CLIP peptide HLA-DM removes CLIP, so MHC II can bind to peptides in endosome o MHC-peptide complex goes to cell surface recognition by CD4 TcR binds to specific MHCII (recognizes antigen) CD4 binds to invariant region of MHC II Features of MHCs o One peptide displayed at a time each T cell responds to single MHC-peptide o Peptides acquired during MHC complex assembly intracellularly (endosome for MHC II, ER for MHC I) o Low affinity, broad specificity different peptides can bind to the same MHC o Slow off-rate peptide displayed long enough to get specific T cell o Stable expression requires peptide empty MHCs recycled o MHCs only bind peptides MHC-restricted T cells only respond to protein antigens (not carb, lipid, na!) Cross-presentation o Costimulation is only provided well by APCs (especially DCs) o So, CD8 cells need a way to respond to virus-infected cells, which don’t provide costimulation o DCs ingest virus-infected cells and present viral peptide on MHC I = cross-presentation antigens move from endosome to cytoplasm! Then they follow MHC I pathway and are presented to CD8 They’re also present to CD4 via MHC II like usual MHC molecules and peptide binding o MHC’s have polymorphic peptide binding domains o Peptides that bind are 9-12 aa Have anchor residues (Y) which bind to MHC o Diff MHC’s bind to diff peptides from same antigen bc they have diff aa’s o MHC must be able to bind to peptides of an antigen to have T cell response to that antigen 13 o MHC structure o MHC I and II genes linked on chromosome 6 o MHC I HLA- A, B, C genes 10-70 alleles for each Complex: MHC I alpha chain, beta-2-microglobulin, peptide CD8 binds to alpha 3 domain o MHC II HLA- DR, DQ, DP genes 7-70 alleles for each Complex: MHC II alpha chain, MHC II beta chain, peptide Alpha and beta are polymorphic, mostly in alpha 1 and beta 1 domains, which interact with TcR CD4 binds to beta 2 domain o Codominant expression; complete set of genes inherited from each parent increases diversity of MHC o Polymorphic genes diff individuals present and respond to diff microbial peptides Examples: 1. influenza virus 2. mycobacterium tuberculosis 3. strept pneumoniae o Tissue distribution of MHC I and II antigens o B cells, DC, macrophages express lots of MHC II proficient at presenting to CD4 T cells o All nucleated cells express MHC I proficient at presenting to CD8 T cells o Non-classical MHC molecules o HLA-G MHC I Nonpolymorphic, no HLA-A, B, or C In extravillous trophoectoderm (fetal tissue contacting maternal circulation) May prevent maternal immune response (T and NK cells) against paternal antigens in the fetus o CD1d Nonpolymorphic Not encoded in MHC region On B cells, DC, and some non-APCs Presents non-peptide antigens (lipid and glycolipid) to T cells Restricts T cell response to foreign microbial antigens o Uptake and presentation of foreign antigens (MHC II, or MHC I via cross-presentation) o Immature DCs take in foreign antigens at epithelium/CT o DCs get signals that there’s a pathogen Pathogen-associated molecular signals (lipopolysaccharide, double stranded RNA) Inflammatory cytokines o DCs migrate to lymph nodes via lymphatics to present to T lymphocytes Migrate to T cell areas using cytokine gradients 14 DCs mature and upregulate expression of costimulatory molecules activate antigen-specific T cells by presenting antigen and giving costimulation o Antigens that enter blood stream can be captured by APCs in spleen o What to know o Understand MHC class I pathway o Understand MHC class II pathway o Know the fundamental differences in the Class I and II MHC processing pathways, and with which subsets of T cells they interact. o Know the general properties of class I and class II MHC molecules o Know the restrictions for peptide binding to MHC molecules. o Know the significance of MHC gene polymorphisms o Understand the role of dendritic cells in antigen presentation to naïve T cells T CELL RECOGNITION OF ANTIGEN o Combatting intracellular infections is primary role of T lymphocyte o Microbes in phagosome can resist proteolysis o Viruses in cytoplasm o T lymphocytes o Scan for intracellular pathogens via TcR o TcR recognizes antigenic peptides on MHC o Once recognized, T cells become effectors attack, recruit other cells, increase killing efficiency o CD8 cells (CTL) o CD4 cells (Th) Can differentiate to effectors, secrete cytokines Target of AIDS virus o Induce adaptive immune response and immunological memory o Antigen recognition o DO NOT recognize native antigen Recognize peptides from antigens (bacteria, virus) on MHC o TcR -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Alpha and beta chains created from gene recombination Each T cell expresses TcR with diff sequence that recognizes unique peptide-MHC complex Rearrangement/expression in thymus during T cell devel. TcR complex TcR: unique alpha and beta for each MHC-peptide CD3 proteins: activate signaling pathways in T cell; identical on all T cells o Coreceptors needed for T cell activation o CD4: binds to MHC II invariant residues in beta 2 domain o CD8: binds to MHC I invariant residues in alpha 3 domain o Immunological synapse o Naïve T cells circulate through nodes and spleen looking for APCs with MHC-peptide that matches their TcRs o T cell stimulation requires: TcR binding to MHC-peptide CD4/8 coreceptor activation 15 o o o o o CD3 signal conduction Adhesion molecule (integrin) engagement ICAM-1 on T cell, LFA-1 on APC Surround TcR-MHC proteins and hold cells together o = immunological synapse Chemokines and antigen-TcR binding make integrins become high-affinity strong adhesion between cells T cell response Costimulation (see below) Costimulation o Activates specific pathways, ESSENTIAL for naïve T cell activation o CD80 (aka B7): on APCs, binds to CD28 on T cells o CD86: on APCs o Expression on APC increases in response to microbe signal 2 o Only on DC, mac, B cell ONLY THES PROFESSIONAL APCs can activate naïve T cells!! o Two-signal model to prevent response to self antigens Signal 1: TcR binds to MHC-peptide If CD8 T cell only gets signal 1 tolerance (T cell is unresponsive/inactived – anergy) Signal 2: CD28 binds to costimulator, which upregulates at APC surface in presence of microbe Signal 1 and 2 growth and cytokine production of T cell o Cross-presentation of extracellular peptides by MHC I is needed so that CD8 T cells can get activated! ?????? Early T cell activation, growth, cytokine production o Clonal expansion Activated T cell begins to divide A LOT Daughter cells (clones) have same TcR and same MHC-peptide specificity o T cells make growth factors to support their growth Interleukin 2 (IL-2) Interleukin/lymphokine: soluble proteins make by immune cells Production stimulated by TcR stim T cell increases high-affinity Il-2 receptor as well autocrine signaling loop Also paracrine function of IL-2 on other cells B cell differentiation Growth factor for NK cells Turning off immune response o Activated T cells begin expressing CTLA-4 o CTLA-4 binds strongly to CD80 and 86, replacing CD28 inhibitory signal o Lack of CTLA-4 function can cause inflammatory disorders, tissue injury Superantigens o Some bacteria/viruses make proteins that are superantigens bc they stimulate lost of diff T cells o Bind to sides of MHC II and Vb region of TcR, gluing APC and TcR together o Tons of cytokine production vascular leakage, shock o Staphylococcal enterotoxins (food poisoning, toxic shock syndrome) What to know o How the TCR recognizes antigen 16 o o o o o o Coreceptors involved in T cell activation What is costimulation? Clonal expansion of antigen specific T cells Role of cytokines in T cell activation Inhibition of T cell activation by CTLA-4 What are superantigens? T CELL RESPONSE AND T CELL MEDIATED IMMUNITY o T cell selection o T cell precursors migrate to thymus (progenitor cells committed to T cell lineage) o Most die within thymus o T cells undergo gene rearrangement in thymus TcR expressed on thymocytes Have CD4 and CD8 = double positive thymocytes Many can’t express usable TcR o Positive selection: cells with TcR that weakly binds to MHC I or II survive Thymic epithelial cells in thymic cortex are the presenting cells, present lots of peptides that would normally be expressed elsewhere Then express only CD4 or 8 depending on if they bind MHC I or II o Negative selection: cells with TcR that strongly binds to MHC I or II die Autoreactive, so may cause problems in periphery DC, mac, medullary epithelium are the presenting cells o Select T cells that recognize self MHC and foreign peptide, not self peptide! o Regulatory T cells: possibly come from cells with very high affinity for self CD4 cells that suppress immune responses when exported to periphery Inhibit via cytokine production (active) and interaction with other cells (passive) o Lymphocyte trafficking and recirculation: speed dating btwn lymphocytes and DC’s o Naïve B and T cells (have not found their antigen yet) recirculate through secondary lymph organs o Adhesion molecules on surface let them attach to endothelial cells to exit blood stream via HEV o Homing adhesion molecules attach to specific molecules on endothelial cells (addressins) in certain sites --------------------- Allows lymphocytes to target mucosal or peripheral lymph node areas MALT: lymphocytes stimulated in one MALT site will migrate to other MALT sites via homing o Once activated, lymphocytes alter chemokine receptors so they can go into blood stream and infection o Tolerance o Antigen-specific T or B cells reactive to self tissues may be: Clonally deleted Made functionally unresponsive Prevented from responding (suppressed) Lacking antigen-specific receptor or MHC element (CD4/8) o Tolerance is specific Can still respond to other antigens May be partial (e.g. weak/altered immune response) Can be humoral or cellular o Central tolerance Clonally deleting T and B self-reactives in the thymus 17 and marrow (i.e. negative selection) Antigen exposure during development Virus in neonate may be seen as self deletion of lymphocytes responsive to it o Peripheral tolerance Some autoreactive T cells make it to the periphery If self-antigen is on an APC when the APC also happens to have antigen particles, autoreactive T cell can get costimulation and respond; otherwise, they won’t respond anergy (expression of proapopotic proteins or of death receptor and death receptor ligands Fas/Fas-L) CD4 T regulatory cells can keep T cells from responding o Effector cells in T cell immunity ----------------------------------------------- o Activation requires: Specific signal via TcR General costimulatory signal Activation autocrine growth factors (IL-2), alters cells surface molecules (for trafficking), inc membrane proteins to trigger other cells (e.g. CD154), production of cytokines o CD8 cytotoxic T cells (CTL): recognize MHC I o Host resistance to pathogens that live in cytosol (e.g. viruses) o Recognize pathogens via MHC I o Killing mechanisms Lyse cells they bind to with perforin and granzymes pores in cell membrane apoptosis Release factors (TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma) onto cells they bind to or express molecules on surface (Fas-L) that trigger apoptosis o CD4 helper T cells (Th): recognize MHC II o Early mature cells: Th0 Broad spectrum of cytokines o Later mature cells: Th1, Th2, Th17 Th1: inflammatory responses (activate mac and CTL) via cytokines IFN-gamma, IL-2, TNF-alpha Intracellular microbes – help macrophages become completely activated (IFN, TNF) Makes cytokines that recruit macrophages and inc release from marrow (GM-CSF, IL-3) TNF promotes adhesion of macrophages to endothelial cells at infection site Induce B cells to make IgG IFN-gamma: prevents induction of Th2; increase production of cytokines that inc Th1 differentiation (pos feedback) Th2: help B cells grow/differentiate via cytokines IL-4, IL-5, IL13 Induce B cells to make Ig, isotype switching, affinity maturation!! Via: Cytokines o IL-4 IgE IgE binds to mast cells mast cells make IL-4 Th2 induction (pos fdbck) o 18 o Allergic rxns Surface molecules that engage B cells IL-5 eosinophil production in marrow (worms, large parasites) Th17: inflammation, autoimmunity, inflammatory disorders via IL-17 o CD4 regulatory T cells (Treg) o Usually derived from strongly self-reacting CD4 cells in the thymus; become T reg with IL-2 and Foxp3 o Suppress T cell immune responses in thymus (inhibit activation) and periphery (inhibit effector function) o Maintain tolerance to self-proteins o Contact-dependent mechanism that reduces inflammatory response via IL-10, TGF-beta o Cytokines o Act like hormones and NTs for cellular communication o Proteins, peptides, or glycoproteins o Interleukins, interferons, etc o Have lots of functions; related to allergies, cancer, inflammatory disease, immune reconstitution o Cytokines enhance or suppress cell-mediated immunity treatment of autoimmunity, cancer, etc. o What to know o Thymic structure o T cell development in the thymus o What is MHC restriction? Why is this important? o Mechanisms of central vs peripheral tolerance o T cell trafficking in the periphery and into tissue o Role of cytokines in T cell effector cell development o Mechanisms of CD8+ T cell function o CD4+ T cell subsets and their function in immunity 19 ANTIBODY DIVERSITY o Nomenclature for Ig gene segments o Variable (V): exons encoded as a family of related sequences o Diversity (D): small exons that contribute to sequence variability; 3’ to V o Joining (J): small exons that contribute to sequence variability; 3’ to J o Constant (C): exons that define class and effector function of Ig; 3’ to VDJ o Antibody genes o 3 unlinked gene groups on diff chromosomes encode Ig one for kappa L chains one for lamba L chains one for H chains o Recombination occurs within each group Multiple coding exons recombine o Variable region (V) Mature B cell or plasma cell: Vregion of H chain is continuous Germ-line or non B cell: V region of H chain is interrupted by introns V region of H chain has 3 segments V segment D segment J segment V region of L chains V segment J segment o Constant region (C) In both L and H chains 3’ to V genes but separated from them by unused J segments and non-coding DNA 1 functional gene segment for each class and subclass C regions of H chains o 1 segment each for M, D, G1-4, E, A1-2 o also encodes transmembrane domain C regions of L chains o 1 segment for kappa group, 7 segments for lambda group o Gene rearrangement/translocation o In development, B cell selects: one V,D, J combo for H chain one V, J combo for L chain o H chain group rearranges first Selected D moved next to selected J Selected V moved upstream of DJ heavy chain V region C genes are downstream, the closest one is M Primary transcript has VDJ, intervening DNA, M That is spliced to mRNA with VDJC complete IgM heavy chain o L chain rearrangement next Selected V from either kappa or lambda moves next to selected J light chain V region C region Kappa chains: C region 3’ to V region with unused J between Lambda chains: one of 7 lambda C genes associated with the J segment Primary transcript has VJ, intervening DNA, C 20 o That is spliced to mRNA with VJC complete IgM light chain Rearrangement requires recombination activating genes RAG-1, RAG-2 Only expressed in developing lymphocytes Break and rejoin DNA during translocation o Synthesis and assembly of chains o L and H polypeptides combine in the ER to form Ig o Antigen-specific Ig transported to plasma membrane o Heavy chain has C terminal sequence that anchors Ig to plasma membrane This sequence is removed in plasma cells so Ig can be secreted o Ways to create diversity o Antigen independent mechanisms Combinational diversity Gene segments chosen at random in each B cell (number of possible VDJ, VJ combos) Random selection and pairing of L and H chains in the ER Junctional diversity Imprecise joining of VDJ of H chain or VJ of L chain (variability in position of joining) o Last nt of V could be replace by first nt of J change in antigen binding area Addition or subtraction of nt during recombination o TdT adds nt’s to ends of gene segments, called N nucleotides o Overhangs during recombination may be filled in with P nucleotides o Antigen-dependent mechanisms B cells stimulated by antigen and Th undergoes somatic mutation: changes in V regions of L and H chain that increase/decrease affinity Affinity maturation: B cells that increase affinity of their Ig will become plasma cells with a higher affinity Ig o Lots of B cells are wasted, but excess diversity ensures response to wide array of antigens o Allelic exclusion o After successful rearrangement of VH and VL, other gene segments are suppressed 1 specificity If rearrangement doesn’t work, another rearrangement will occur o Unique to B and T cell antigen receptors o Differential splicing and Ig receptor expression ------------- o IgM expressed first on B cell o Then IgM and IgD Have same VH and VL same specificity Mature naïve B cell o Primary RNA transcript is differentially spliced to yield two mRNA’s (IgM and IgD) Primary has both M and D constant regions 21 o Stages of B cell differentiation --------------------------- o In bone marrow o Signals: marrow stromal cells, cytokines induce o H chain rearranged first o Pre-BCR complex: M protein expressed on cell surface with 2 invariant chains (L-like) Signal to stop H chain rearrangement and work on L chain o Successful H and L chain functional IgM = immature B cell susceptible to tolerance induction IgM is signal for survival and expansion o Then get coexpression of IgM and IgD = mature naïve B cell responds to antigen; required for diff to plasma cell o B cell receptor (BCR) complex --------------------------------------------------------------------------- o Ig alpha and beta are 2 TM polypeptides associated with Ig that signal for BCR Ig are TM molecules but cytoplasmic domain is only 3 aa long can’t signal Signal prepares B cell to interact with Th cell (effects on transcription factors like Myc, AP-1) Identical signaling for all B cells o B cell coreceptor complex: CD21/CR2, CD32, CD19, CD81 Enhances or inhibits BCR complex If BCR and coreceptor both bind to antigen/complement, CD21 and 32 are engaged CD19 and 81 influence signaling via Ig-alpha/beta complex o B cell tolerance o During B cell development Negative selection: deletion or anergy (can’t respond) of self-reactive B cells which express receptors with high affinity for self or bind to membrane antigens Receptor editing: recombination of L chain genes, making B cell with new specificity Chance to change from self-reactivity and survive o After secondary stimulation of memory B cells Susceptible to tolerance by epitopes presented multivalently if they don’t get T cell help o Self-reactive B cells can get activated if they express both self and non-self peptides at the same time (will get T cell help) o What to know o Know how antibody diversity is generated (recombination) o Understand how differential splicing is used to create immunoglobulin o Know what allelic exclusion is and why it is important (get 1 specificity!) o Understand the role of antigen in the generation of antibody diversity (no much of a role!) o Know stages of B cell development and when self-tolerance can occur (2 occurrences) o Know the different components of the B cell receptor o Understand B cell tolerance to self antigens HUMORAL IMMUNITY o Antigen origin impacts response o Introduced in blood spleen splenic macs and CDs presentation of antigenic determinants T cells o Mucosal areas B cells, macs, DCs below mucosa presentation of antigenic determinants T cells B cell has antigen plus T cell help humoral response IgA released to mucosa 22 Tissues travels through lymphatics to lymph tissue/node B cells, macs, DCs presentation of antigenic determinants to T cells T cells in paracortical region, B cells in follicle and divide in germinal center Primary response o Occurs within 5-8 days of exposure o Production of IgM followed by IgG or IgA by plasma cells o Durations depends on quantity of antigen and mode of entry o Ig reacts with antigen, making complexes or precipitates eliminated by phagocytosis o Ig production reaches peak after antigen is gone o One B cell makes one specific Ig, but lots of B cells get activated by diff antigenic determinants B cell activation o Need to avoid activating non-specific B cells o B cells recognize antigenic determinant via Ig on membrane (affiliated with Ig-alpha-beta = BCR) o Antigen coated with complement interacts with CD21/CR2, CD19, CD81 o Results in signaling pathway activation, transcription factor activation o Consequences of antigen binding Proliferation Upregulation of CD80/B7 Upregulation of cytokine receptors Processing and presentation of antigen on MHC II Downregulation of chemokine receptors so it can leave follicle Low-level secretion of IgM Now can encounter antigen-specific T cell o B-T interaction for activation of naïve B cells when they get to parafollicular zone (T cell zone) B cell presents antigen to activated Th Th has CD154 (CD40 ligand, reacts with CD40 on B) and cytokines CD154-CD40 interaction required ensures antigen-specific activation B cells proliferate and become: Memory cells Plasma cells that secrete specific Ig B cell differentiation after activation: occurs in germinal center o Ig isotype switching ------------------------------------------ B cells with IgM and IgD can switch to other H chain classes E.g. to IgA or IgE in mucosal region Requires stimulation via CD154-CD40 and cytokines (IFN-gamma, IL-4, IL-5) Get translocation of VDJ 5’ to another H constant (C) region Guided by repetitive DNA Intervening C DNA cut out If a plasma cell, heavy chain C regions are removed to allow secretion o Affinity maturation Affinity of Ig for antigen increases with time B cells increase in number, start competing those w/ high affinity expand o o o o 23 o o o Also, somatic mutation of VH and VL in B cells stimulated by antigen and T cells Decrease in dissociation constant Secondary (memory) response ------------------------------------- o Reintroduction of antigen faster, better response o Dec lag period for Ig presence due to memory cells o More plasma cells develop o Higher conc Ig in serum o More antigen-binding cells those with highest affinity for follicular DC’s or Th win results in plasma cells with high affinity Competition = need higher affinity!! o Vaccination T cell independent (TI) B cell response o Some antigens can activate B without Th = TI antigens Resistant to degradation Often repeated epitopes, so they cluster around the B cell and activate it E.g. bacterial cell wall, poly-aa, dextran o Primary IgM response peaks a little early o But poor induction of memory B cells (secondary response is like primary) o No IgG response, prob bc they don’t induce cytokines/signaling that lead to isotype switching Immunity in newborn: immature and takes a bit longer o Lymphocytes in newborn Higher thank normal numbers of T and B (and NK) But, limited ability to respond to some antigens Age of exposure to antigen is important Sequential expression of genes encoding for receptors for antigens Immaturity of B and T cells Immaturity of APCs o Ig in newborn Maternal IgG crosses placenta (using Fc receptors), compensates for lack of IgG until infant makes it IgM made during fetal development IgA is made by 1-2 months age Maternal IgA obtained via colostrum, milk gives mucosal immunity (passive) Passive immunity from mother may interfere with development of active immunity don’t respond to some antigens 24