(Auto)antibodies in infection and inflammation Flashcards

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1
Q

What happens to autoreactive B-cells in the bone marrow?

A

B-cells expressing autoreactive BCR are made anergic and commit apoptosis.

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2
Q

Where to B-cells from the bone marrow mature?

A

The spleen

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3
Q

What happens to B-cells in the germinal center?

A
  1. Clonal expansion
  2. Affinity maturation
  3. diff to Memory B or Plasma cells
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4
Q

What is often found in patients with autoimmune diseases?

A

Defects in early B-cell tolerance.

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5
Q

What is the most direct route of T-helper induced autoimmune B-cells?

A

It is when the T-cell can recognise the same antigen as the B-cell.

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6
Q

What is the concept of molecular mimicry in autoimmune B-cell activation?

A

Some pathogen peptides displayed on T-cells can give rise to B-cells which react with the pathogen peptide but also cross-react with self peptide. Those autoreactive B-cells are then selected and cause autoimmunity.

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7
Q

What is class switching?

A

Class switching is when a B-cell switches the production of one type of antibody (mostly IgM) to another kind of antibody (IgA, IgG or IgE) depending on the situation.

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8
Q

How may B-cell activation happen outside the germinal center?

A

Ectopic (out of place) lymphoid organs can form (synovial tissue in RA and kidney in SLE). They closely resemble germinal centers and are associated with the production of autoreactive antibodies.

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9
Q

Name three ways of T-cell-dependent autoimmune B-cell activation

A
  1. Direct pathway, in which T and B cells react to the same antigen
  2. The mimicry pathway, in which a presented antigen by T-cells can give rise to self-antigen cross-reacting B-cells
  3. In ectopic germinal
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10
Q

Name three ways of T-cell-dependent autoimmune B-cell activation

A
  1. Direct pathway, in which T and B cells react to the same antigen
  2. The mimicry pathway, in which a presented antigen by T-cells can give rise to self-antigen cross-reacting B-cells
  3. In (pathogenic) ectopic germinal centers, where autoimmune B-cells are produced.
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11
Q

What is most often the target of autoantibodies and when do they get the chance to bind to their target?

A

They most often target common intracellular molecules. They usually bind to those molecule when a cell dies and its insides are spilled out into the interstitial space.

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12
Q

What do autoantibodies in RA target?

A

One common example is Rheumatoid Factor (RF) which targets the Fc portion of an IgG antibody (which are abundantly found in the serum)

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13
Q

What goes wrong with apoptosis in RA and SLE patients?

A

In RA and SLE, macrophages fail to clear the apoptotic mess effectively, letting spilled proteins from the intracellular space float freely, thus activating the immune system

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14
Q

What two examples of modifications are induced in the nucleus during apoptosis and how are they relevant in RA and SLE?

A

Citrullination and acetylation of the histones, which can be recognized by RA and SLE autoreactive antibodies (along with several more nucleic proteins)

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15
Q

What is cross-reactivity?

A

Cross-reactivity measures the extent to which different antigens appear similar to the immune system

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16
Q

What are the two main hypotheses on the generation of autoantibodies?

A
  1. Autoantibodies arise when failure to clear out debris after apoptosis leads to a self-immune reaction.
  2. Cross-reactivity leads to B-cells “mistaking” self-antigen with harmful antigen, thus producing antibodies against this self-antigen.
17
Q

Why are TLR7 and TLR9 deficient mice more resistant to lupus-like symptoms?

A

TLR recognition of self-antigen is an important step in reducing B-cell tolerance.

18
Q

What is tolerance defined as?

A

Tolerance is when an immune cell has the capacity to not react to self-antigen presented to it.

19
Q

What is the hypothesis behind TLR/BCR signaling and escaping tolerance?

A

It is hypothesized that simultaneous activation of TLR and BCR in immature B-cells can lead to positive selection in the germinal center.

20
Q

Where are TLR7 and TLR9 found and what do they react to?

A

They are found in endosomes, in B-cells and other antigen-presenting cells, and they react to nuclear antigens (DNA, RNA etc).

21
Q

What is important to know about TLR and BCR signaling together?

A

They have a synergistic response.

22
Q

What cytokine is involved in T-cell-independent autoreactive B-cell activation?

A

B-cell activating factor (BAFF), which is involved in TLR activation in B-cells.

23
Q

What does BAFF do in B-cells?

A

BAFF is shown to activate TLR in B-cells, leading to somatic hypermutation and class-switching.

24
Q

How can TLR activation lead to somatic hypermutation in autoreactive B-cells?

A

Activation of TLR in B-cells can lead to enhanced antigen presentation and increase in surface expression of co-stimulatory molecules

25
Q

What kind of recognition pattern is needed to escape tolerance?

A

BCR and PRR (TLR etc) recognition of antigens, due to their synergistic nature.

26
Q

What are the most common systemic auto antibodies?

A

ANAs (Antinuclear antibodies) and ACPAs (anticitrullinated protein antibodies)

27
Q

How does autoantibody IgM lead to less production of autoantibody IgG?

A

auto IgM can activate the inhibitory LAIR1, which inhibits the immune effector response.

28
Q

Why do antibodies bind to the synovium in RA?

A

Because the synovium contains a lot of citrullinated molecules.

29
Q

What is the multiple-hit theory?

A

Genetic and environmental factors induce an initial break in tolerance, leading to the production of autoimmune antibodies. A second hit is often needed (apoptosis and spilling of nuclear enzymes) to induce pathogenesis

30
Q

What is the vicious cycle of chronic inflammation?

A

Autoantibodies bind to spilled nuclear protein, which induces an immune reaction. This reaction can potentially cause more tissue damage, leading to more spill

31
Q

What is the variable and what is the constant region of an antibody?

A

The Fab region is the variable one and the Fc region is the constant one.

32
Q

What is the direct and indirect pathway of antigen recognition?

A
  1. Direct: antigen from a pathogen directly binds to PRR (TLR, NLR etc) and activates an immune reaction
  2. Indirect: antibody binds to pathogen. Fc receptors then bind to the Fc domain on the pathogen-bound antibodies, where opsonization is facilitated
33
Q

What is the most abundant antibody during the whole course of an infection?

A

IgG

IgM is abundant in the early phase, but gets outnumbered by IgG once adaptive immunity kicks in

34
Q

What is a crucial element in IgG function?

A

Its hinge and bending flexibility, which enables it to bind to pathogens and effector molecules simultaneously

35
Q

What are the three functions of an antibody?

A
  1. Neutralization: the antibody binds to a pathogen or toxin, blocking its structure and rendering it useless
  2. Complement activation: antibodies can lead to the recruitment of the membrane attack complex
  3. Opsonization: antibodies bind to a pathogen, exposing their Fc domain. The Fc domain binds to Fc receptors on macrophages, which enhances phagocytosis