Autoimmunity Flashcards
What is Autoimmunity?
The immune system has self-tolerant mechanisms. When these breakdown, autoimmunity occurs.
Autoreactive antibodies and autoreactive T cells develop. These recognise self antigens. i.e. normal componenets of the body
What is the spectrum of autoimmunity?
Can be organ-specific
- E.g. Hashimoto’s thyroiditis - thyroid-specific
Or involve many organs
- E.g. SLE (systemic lupus erythematosus)
- Non-organ specific, one of the dominant antibodies is directed against cell nucleus

What happens in Hashimoto’s thyroiditis?
Enlarged thyroid in Hashimoto’s thyroiditis
Antibodies are directed against thyroglobulin
- Antibodies in serum of Hashimoto’s disease patient bind to residual thyroglobulin in colloid and acinar epithelial cells
What are 2 different ways u can have the disease and who is more likely to get it, men or woman?
- An individual may have more than one autoimmune disease
e. g. Rheumatoid Arthritis often associated with SLE - Autoimmune diseases can occur in families Certain HLA haplotypes predispose to auto-immunity
E.g. Hashimoto’s thyroiditis - HLA-DR5
Rheumatoid Arthritis - HLA-DR1 and -DR4
- Prevalence: ~3.5% population have autoimmune disease
- Overall, women are 2.7x more likely than men to develop autoimmune disease
What is an example of Human autoantibodies being directly pathogenic?
Thyrotoxicosis (Graves’ disease)
- AutoAb (autoantibody) produced to receptor for Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH)
- Act on receptor
- Stimulate thyroid cell
- Overproduction of thyroid hormones
AutoAb is autoantibodies that are made against substances formed by a person’s own body
What happens in Pernicious Anaemia?
- Normally dietary vitamin B12 is absorbed as a complex with intrinsic factor (IF)
- In pernicious anaemia autoantibodies directed against IF are produced
- Binding of autoantibody to IF prevents interaction with Vit B12
- As a result, Vit B12 is not absorbed
What is Sjögren’s syndrome?
- Chronic inflammatory autoimmune disorder
- Can occur in isolation or with SLE, RA or other rheumatic autoimmune disorders
- Majority of patients are women symptoms develop in 4th-5th decade actual onset probably in 1st-2nd decade
- May affect 1-2% of population
- Characterised by a lymphocytic infiltrate in salivary and lacrimal glands
- Slow destruction and replacement of glandular tissue with fibrotic tissue
- Lack of saliva and tear secretion - dental caries, oral Candida
- Condition confirmed by presence in serum of autoantibodies
How can Autoimmune Disorders be treated?
1.In some organ-specific diseases, metabolic control is sufficient e.g.:
- anti-thyroid drugs in Graves’ disease
- injection of Vit B12 in pernicious anaemia
- Anti-inflammatory drugs - e.g. corticosteriods or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs)
- Immunosuppressive drugs - e.g. cyclosporin
- Monoclonal antibodies to blockade certain cytokines or their receptors

