DIAL 3. Effector Mechanisms of Antibody-Mediated Immunity Flashcards
Identify the antibody isotypes involved in neutralization, opsonization, and complement activation and the general role of the these processes in antibody mediated immunity
neutralization - mediated by neutralizing antibodies (NAb), bind to microbe to prevent passing through membranes, and inactivation of pathogenic ligands, also block the binding of toxins to cell receptors
Opsonization - mediated by IgG (IgE maybe), promotes microbe ingestion by phagocytes, also cause ADCC (by NK cells & defense against helminthic parasites
Complement - IgM or some IgG, opsonizes for phagocytes, form MAC, and bind to neutrophils to release inflammatory peptides
Describe the characteristics and functions of Fc receptors involved in antibody-mediated phagocytosis and in antibody-mediated defense against helminthic parasites
Ab-mediated phagocytosis - FcGR1 on macrophages and neutrophils activate the cell when bound to Fc portion of IgG, major defense against encapsulated bacteria
Ab-mediated Helminthic defense - Plasma cells switch to producing IgE for eosinophils and mast cells with FcERI to dump granule contents on parasite
Compare and Contrast the early steps and outcomes of complement activation by the classical, alternative, and lectin pathways
Alternative - activated by microbes without regulatory proteins to stop binding of C3b
Classical - IgM or IgG bind to microbe and activate complement peptides
Lectin - activated when MBL binds to microbe
All pathways result in formation of Membrane Attack Complex (MAC) in late stage and release of inflammatory peptides and opsonization by C3b
Explain the general mechanism by which complement activation promotes opsonization inflammation, and microbe lysis.
Opsonization - microbes coated with C3b are phagocytosed (C3b is recognized by CRI)
Inflammation - C5a, C4a, C3a are release as cleaved peptides and are chemotactic for neutrophils to release inflammatory proteins
Microbe lysis - C5b starts formation of MAC. C6, C7, C8, C9 subsequently bind.
Describe the general mechanism that prevent complement-mediated damage to host cells
Mammalian cells express regulatory proteins that interfere with the cleavage and binding of complement peptides.