BL 02-27-14 10-11am Immunohematology - Cohen Flashcards
Transfusion - transplanting red cells
-Red cells DO NOT carry MHC antigens in humans
- The antigens they do carry are much less polymorphic in the population (many fewer
alleles)
- The white cells that come along with the white cells are recognized & destroyed (which is fine when you just are wanting the red cells)
- The ability to transfuse red cells from one person to another depends on avoiding immune responses
- When problems arise, they are often immunological
Transfusion - transplating platelets
- Platelets DO bear HLA (Class I) antigens
- with repeated platelet transfusions, alloimmunization may be developed
- in that case, HLA typing becomes necessary (expensive, hard to find good matches)
Blood group ANTIGENS
- glycolipids found on the surface of ALL BODY CELLS, including red cells of course
- The lipid backbone spans the plasma membrane
- The terminal sugars confer antigenic specificity, A, B or O
Blood group SUBSTANCES
- glycoproteins with similar sugars, found in the body fluids of people who have the Secretor (Se) phenotype.
- ~80% of people are secretors
- their blood type can be determined from sweat stains, cigarette butts, etc.
- NO particular advantages to being a secretor
O antigen - pros & cons
People who are O are…
- somewhat protected from pancreatic cancer
- much less likely to develop venous thromboembolic disorders
Structure of Blood group antigens
- A set of glycosyl transferases assemble the
basic “core” sugar chain which almost everybody has = called the “H” antigen - Then a final glycosyl transferase, of which there
are three alleles, can act and produce the different antigens
Antigen differences in A, B, O, AB
- The O allele is an “amorph;” it does not
code for a working transferase & so group O people have only the basic core, the H antigen. - People who are group A have a glycosyl
transferase allele which puts an additional sugar on the core chain - People who are B have a different allelic form of this enzyme which adds a different sugar.
- Group AB individuals have both the A and B antigens on their red cells, because they got both the A and B transferases from their parents.
Bombay phenotype
- Some people who lack the transferase gene that puts the final sugar on the “core”, and thus do not express even the H antigen
= rare Bombay phenotype (Oh,) - All blood, even type O, is foreign to such people (can only give Bombay blood)
- Appears as type O blood on normal typing tests
Commonness of ABO antigens in environment
- ABO antigens are very simple carb structures, so it’s not surprising that they are found in many places in nature.
- Thus, one will inevitably come into contact w/ these carbs in the environment during infancy
- Those which are not the same as your own are, of course, foreign to you, & you BECOME IMMUNIZED to them (type A person will make Ab to B; type O person will make Ab to both A & B, etc.)
- These Abs are called “naturally-occurring” or ISOHEMAGGLUTININS
Class of Isohemagglutinins
IgM
Measure titers of isohemagglutinins
- Can be of use in Dx of B cell immunodeficiency, since they should begin to appear in blood between 3 & 6 mo of age, as antigen exposure occurs
What kind of cells do Group A people have?
Cells with A carbohydrate antigens on them.
What kind of cells do Group B people have?
Cells with B carbohydrate antigens on them.
What kind of cells do Group O people have?
Cells with NO carbohydrate antigens on them.
What kind of cells do Group AB people have?
Cells with both A & B carbohydrate antigens on them.
What kind of antibodies do Group A people make?
anti-B
What kind of antibodies do Group B people make?
anti-A
What kind of antibodies do Group O people make?
anti-A & anti-B
What kind of antibodies do Group AB people make?
None
What are the possible genotype(s) for Group A people?
AA or AO
What are the possible genotype(s) for Group B people?
BB or BO