(Auto)antibodies in infection and inflammation Flashcards
What happens to autoreactive B-cells in the bone marrow?
B-cells expressing autoreactive BCR are made anergic and commit apoptosis.
Where to B-cells from the bone marrow mature?
The spleen
What happens to B-cells in the germinal center?
- Clonal expansion
- Affinity maturation
- diff to Memory B or Plasma cells
What is often found in patients with autoimmune diseases?
Defects in early B-cell tolerance.
What is the most direct route of T-helper induced autoimmune B-cells?
It is when the T-cell can recognise the same antigen as the B-cell.
What is the concept of molecular mimicry in autoimmune B-cell activation?
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.
What is class switching?
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.
How may B-cell activation happen outside the germinal center?
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.
Name three ways of T-cell-dependent autoimmune B-cell activation
- Direct pathway, in which T and B cells react to the same antigen
- The mimicry pathway, in which a presented antigen by T-cells can give rise to self-antigen cross-reacting B-cells
- In ectopic germinal
Name three ways of T-cell-dependent autoimmune B-cell activation
- Direct pathway, in which T and B cells react to the same antigen
- The mimicry pathway, in which a presented antigen by T-cells can give rise to self-antigen cross-reacting B-cells
- In (pathogenic) ectopic germinal centers, where autoimmune B-cells are produced.
What is most often the target of autoantibodies and when do they get the chance to bind to their target?
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.
What do autoantibodies in RA target?
One common example is Rheumatoid Factor (RF) which targets the Fc portion of an IgG antibody (which are abundantly found in the serum)
What goes wrong with apoptosis in RA and SLE patients?
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
What two examples of modifications are induced in the nucleus during apoptosis and how are they relevant in RA and SLE?
Citrullination and acetylation of the histones, which can be recognized by RA and SLE autoreactive antibodies (along with several more nucleic proteins)
What is cross-reactivity?
Cross-reactivity measures the extent to which different antigens appear similar to the immune system