4 Immunological Tolerance And Autoimmunity Flashcards

1
Q

(LO) Differentiate acquired tolerance from immunity, immunodeficiency, and immunosuppression

A

Antigen tolerance is unresponsiveness triggered by previous exposure to a specific antigen.

Immunodeficiency is any condition in which there’s a deficiency or inanity to mount a humoral or cell mediated response. LACKS SPECIFICITY TO ANTIGEN

Immunosuppression is due to physical or chemical insults

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2
Q

(LO) Describe the elements of antigen dose, form, and route of
administration that favor the formation of acquired immune tolerance

A

Antigen dose favors tolerance if it’s VERY VERY large or small.

Physical: soluble, simple small molecules, not processed

Administration route: ORAL or intravenous

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3
Q

(LO) Describe the mechanisms associated with central tolerance and
peripheral tolerance

A

Central tolerance occurs in the CENTRAL lymphoid organs bc of immature self-reactive lymphocytes recognizing ubiquitous self-antigen.

Peripheral: induced in peripheral organs as result of MATURE lymphocytes encouraging tissue-specific self antigens

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4
Q

(LO) Using Hashimoto’s thyroiditis and Grave’s Disease as prototypical
autoimmune diseases, explain how autoantibodies can cause
hyperactivity or hypoactivity in a target organ

A

Hashimoto’s: HYPOactivity thyroid destruction by thyroid specific antibodies. Leukocytes infiltrate

Graves: HYPERactivity. Antibodies bind and activate TSH receptor (agonist)

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5
Q

(LO) Recognize the importance of immunologically privileged sites, and
identify the five human immunologically privileged sites

A

Brain
Eye
Testes(ovaries)
Uterus

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6
Q

What is specific immunological unresponsiveness triggered by previous exposure to a specific antigen? Antigens that induce this?

A

Tolerance

Tolerogens

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7
Q

Tolerance is _______ specific and can exist in ________,_______ or both!

A

Antigen specific

B or T cells

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8
Q

Any condition in which there is a deficiency or inability to mount a humoral and/or cell mediated immune response is a ? What does it lack?

A

Immunodeficiency

Lacks specificity to antigen

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9
Q

What are antigen factors for immunological tolerance? (3)

A
Antigen dose
Physical form (monomer, aggregates)
Route of administration
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10
Q

When you have a VERY large or VERY small dose of an antigen, does this favor immune response or tolerance?

A

Tolerance

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11
Q

The administration route for _____________ is subcutaneous or intramuscular opposed to the other response, which is oral.

A

Immune response

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12
Q

If you keep inducing a super small dose (of say an allergy shot) over and over and over again, is this the same as administering a high dose again and again?

A

YES. Will eventually not recognize it and you will become immune over time

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13
Q

Who favors tolerance more, a newborn or an adult?

A

Newborn

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14
Q

What’s the physical deletion/elimination of T cells that have receptors specific for self antigens?

By what process?

Results in?

A

Clonal deletion (apoptotic cell death)

NEGATIVE selection

Results in self tolerance

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15
Q

What’s it called when you have a lack of co-stimulatory signals?

What’s the action of the regulatory (suppressor) lymphocytes?

A

Clonal allergy

IL-10 inhibits proinflammatory cytokines synthesis..

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16
Q

What’s a failure to control the function to self-reactive cells which escaped to the periphery, results in _____________

Hard to stop. Ranges from minor to lethal.

A

AUTOIMMUNE DISEASE

17
Q

What type of hyper sensitivity rxn is Type 1 diabetes?

A

Type 4

18
Q

What type of hypersensitivity rxn is autoimmune hemolytic anemia?

A

Type 2

19
Q

Which of the following are agonists or antagonists? (Activators; destroyers)

Grave’s disease?

Myasthenia Gravis?

Insulin-resistant diabetes?

Hypoglycemia?

A

Agonist

Antagonist

Antagonist

Agonist

20
Q

What disease is destroying the thyroid, HYPOthroidism? Turns OFF

A

Hashimoto’s thyroiditis

21
Q

What disease deals with the anti-thyroid stimulating hormone receptor antibody? HYPERthyroidism turns ON

A

Graves’ disease

Turns ON the TSH receptor

22
Q

What are the four immunologically protected sites?

A

Brain
Eye
Testis/ovaries
Uterus