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Download 2nd - antigen, acute phase response 2013-14
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DEFINITION AND PROPERTIES OF ANTIGEN IMMUNOLOGICAL DEFINITION Any chemical structure Soluble or corpuscle Simple or complex Originated from the body or comes from outside Genetically self or non-self Natural or artificial DEFINITIONS ANTIGEN (Ag) - any substance, which is recognized by the mature immune system of a given organism ANTIGENICITY– capability of an antigen to bind specifically with certain product of the adaptive immunity: TCR or BCR/antibody, – immunogenicity - capability of an antigen to induce an (adaptive) immune response, – tolerogenicity - capability to induce immunological tolerance, specific immune non-responsiveness FACTORS INFLUENCING IMMUNOGENICITY I. • Foreignness • Size • Genetics – Species – Individual • Age • Dose • Route subcutaneous > intravenous > oral / intranasal Not true for live vaccines (i.e. oral polio vaccine) FACTORS INFLUENCING IMMUNOGENICITY II. • Adjuvant (vaccination) – substances that enhance an immune response to an antigen (aluminum salts, LPS, Freund’s adjuvant, TLR ligands) – complex effects • depot effect – slower biodegradation, prolonged antigen intake by antigen presenting cells • activation of innate immunity • Physical status – corpuscle (cell, colloid) or soluble – denatured or native • Degradability – antigen presentation by APC ANTIGENIC DETERMINANT (=EPITOPE) part of the antigen which is recognized by a defined immunoglobulin (BCR / antibody) or by T cell receptor Ig (antibody) BCR (mIg) TYPES (STRUCTURE) OF ANTIGEN DETERMINANTS linear determinant (TCR, BCR, Ig) conformational determinant (BCR, Ig) conformational determinant Ab2 Ab1 surface/accessible determinants cleveage denaturation new/neoantigen determinant conformational/linear determinant hidden/revealed determinant B cell epitope T cell epitope recognized by B cells recognized by T cells • proteins polysaccharides lipids DNA steroids etc. (many artificial molecules) • proteins mainly (8-23 amino acids) • cell or matrix associated or soluble • requires processing by APC ANTIGEN RECOGNITION ≠ CELL ACTIVATION ANTIGEN RECOGNITION BY NAIVE T CELLS REQUIRES PRESENTATION VIA MHC MOLECULES Recognition/ No activation Recognition/ Activation Fever SUPERANTIGENS Microbial proteins that bind to and activate all the T cells that express a particular set or family of TCR molecules resulting in a polyclonal activation. Interaction is not via the peptide binding cleft of MHC molecule. Hypotension Rash Desquamation SUPERANTIGENS Microbial proteins that bind to and activate all the T cells in an individual that express a particular set or family of TCR molecules conventional antigen superantigen monoclonal/oligoclonal polyclonal T cell response T cell response 1:104 - 1:105 107 – 108 / 1011 activated T cells 1:4 - 1:10 1010 / 1011 SUPERANTIGENS Classification Sources Endogenous 1.Mouse mammary tomor virus (MMTV) 2.Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) Exogenous 1.Staphylococcal enterotoxins (SEs): A, B, C1 to C3, D, E, G to Q 2.Staphylococcal toxic shock syndrome toxin-1 (TSST-1) 3.Staphylococcal exfoliative toxins: exoliatin A, exfoliatin B 4.Staphylococcal enterotoxin-like toxins formed due to recombination within enterotoxin gene cluster: U2, V 5.Streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxins (SPEs): A1 to A4, C, G to M 6.Streptococcal mitogenic exotoxins: SMEZ 7.Streptococcal superantigen :SSA 8.Yersinia pseudotuberculosis: Yersinia pseudotuberculosis-derived mitogen (YAM) 9.Mycoplasma species: Mycoplasma arthritidis-derived mitogen (MAM) 10.Cholera toxin: subunit A of cholera toxin 11.Prevotella intermedia* 12.Mycobacterium tuberculosis* 13.Viral superantigens: (a) Mouse leukemia virus (b) IDDMK1222- Ppol-ENV-U3 (c) HIV-Nef (d) Rabies virus-nucleoside protein . T CELL-DEPENDENT B CELL ACTIVATION 1 B cell MHCII +peptide T cell CD4 TCR 2 cytokines Polysacharides are not presented! B CELL ACTIVATION WITHOUT THE HELP OF T CELLS T-INDEPENDENT ANTIGEN TI-1 T-INDEPENDENT ANTIGEN TI-2 B cell Simultaneous activation of BCR and other receptors on B cells (i.e. LPS binding protein /CD14) induces the B cells to proliferate and differentiate (extra activation signal) Strong crosslinking of BCR by repetitive polysaccharide or protein epitopes B CELL ACTIVATION (extensive receptor-aggregation) B CELL ACTIVATION WITHOUT THE HELP OF T CELLS Microorganisms have several different cell surface epitopes COMPLEX ANTIGENS CONSIST OF THE CARRIER AND MULTIPLE EPITOPES (=ANTIGEN DETERMINANTS) HAPTEN substance that is non-immunogenic but which can react with the products of a specific immune response. Haptens are small molecules which could never induce an immune response when administered by themselves but which can when coupled to a carrier molecule. Free haptens, however, can react with products of the immune response after such products have been elicited. Haptens have the property of antigenicity but not immunogenicity. Haptenic/antigen determinant (epitope) part of the antigen which are recognized by a defined immunoglobulin (B cell receptor or antibody) or by T cell receptor Carrier part of the antigen directly not involved in connection with the defined Ig/BCR or TCR These terms can only be used to describe the interaction of particular antigenic determinant and single immunoglobulin or T cell receptor Antibody response generated against a haptencarrier conjugate carrier + hapten antibodies carrier specific hapten specific carrier + hapten specific ACUTE INFLAMMATION AND ACUTE-PHASE RESPONSE THE INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE ACUTE INFLAMMATION • Acute inflammation is a rapid response to an injurious agent that serves to deliver mediators of host defense — leukocytes and plasma proteins — to the site of injury. • Vascular phase – Vasoconstrictionvasodilation – Increased permeability edema, leakage of plasma proteins (acute phase proteins, antibodies) • Cellular phase – Migration of leukocites from the circulation to the site of inflammation CAUSES LEADING TO ACUTE INFLAMMATORY REACTIONS: • Infections (pathogenic microbes and microbial toxins) • Trauma (blunt and penetrating) • Physical and chemical agents (thermal injury e.g. burns or frostbite; irradiation; some environmental chemicals) • Foreign bodies (splinters, dirt, sutures) • Immune reactions (hypersensitivity and autoimmune reactions) The classic symptoms of inflammation: redness (rubor) - vasodilation, swelling (tumor) - edema, heat (calor) – increased perfusion, pain (dolor) – factors stimulating nociceptors, loss of function (functio laesa) CHEMICAL MEDIATORS OF INFLAMMATION I. • Vasodilation – Prostaglandins (PG..), nitric oxide (NO) • Increased vascular permeability – vasoactive amines (histamine, serotonin), C3a and C5a, bradykinin, leukotrienes (LT..), PAF • Chemotaxic leukocyte activation – C3a, C5a, LTB4, chemokines CHEMICAL MEDIATORS OF INFLAMMATION II. • Fever – IL-1, IL-6, TNF, prostaglandins • Pain – prostaglandins, bradykinin • Tissue damage – neutrophil and macrophage products • lysosomal enzymes • oxygen radicals • nitric oxide (NO) MIGRATION OF NEUTROPHILS FROM BLOOD TO INFLAMMED TISSUE MIGRATION OF NEUTROPHILS Neutrophil Transendothelial Migration (Diapedesis) ENDOTHELIAL ADHESION MOLECULES DURING INFLAMMATION PUS Pus is a whitish-yellow, yellow, or yellow-brown exudate produced by vertebrates during inflammatory pyogenic bacterial infections. Pus consists of a thin, protein-rich fluid, known as liquor puris, and dead cells. CONSEQUENCES OF MACROPHAGE ACTIVATION SYNTHESIS OF CYTOKINES ACUTE-PHASE REACTION proinflammatory cytokines hypothalamic control of body temperature increased ‚set-point’ value fever ACUTE PHASE REACTION IL-6 Complement C-reactive protein (CRP) Liver Fibrinogen Serum amyloid protein (SAP) Mannose binding lectin/protein MBL/MBP UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF IL-6 THE LIVER PRODUCES A BUNCH OF ACUTE-PHASE PROTEINS ACUTE-PHASE RESPONSE RESOLUTION OF ACUTE INFLAMMATION SEPTIC SHOCK Triggering factors : • systemic infection (bacteraemia) • microbial cell wall products and/or toxins released from the pathogens Result: Systemic activation of neutrophils and macrophages High level of cytokine (TNF-alpha) production: „cytokine storm” Excessive inflammatory response SEPTIC SHOCK The key molecule of the process: TNF-alpha TNF-alpha and other inflammatory cytokines capillar permeability blood pressure high fever multiorgan failure DIC disseminated intravascular coagulation Therapy: anti-TNF-alpha antibody DIC Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation • pathologic activation of thrombotic process • distress of thrombotic process, bleeding • other causes: snake bite, septic abortion, acute obstetric complications, malignant tumors, leukemias DIC: Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation