Host Response To Viral Infection Flashcards
Describe the different ways hosts respond to viral infections.
Describe innate immunity.
-no antigen specificity or memory
-first defense against viral inf bc:
>always present
>immediately after viral inf
>only immune defense for the first few says after viral inf
Describe innate immunity - primary physical & chemical defenses.
- Skin
-keratin outer layer (mechanical barrier), low pH, FA, dry - Mucous membrane
-virucidal proteins - GIT
-MM of oral cavity & esophagus
-acidity of stomach & alkalinity of intestine
-layer of mucus in gut
-lipolytic bile
-proteolytic pancreatic enzymes
-defensins (host defense peptides) antiviral
=modulate IR - Respiratory tract
-mucociliary blanket
-temp gradient: between nasal passage (33c) & alveoli (37c) = localize inf
>rhinoviruses inf nasopharynx (common cold) = replicate at 33c but not at 37c
>influenza virus (LRT) = inverse temp preference
Describe innate immunity - NK cells.
-death of virus via apoptosis
-syn & release cytokines like type II IFN & interleukins = stim own prolif & cytolytic activity
Describe innate immunity - PRR.
-cells at portals of virus entry = surface receptors (PRR) that recog specific PAMPs
-one class of PRRs = TLRs
Describe innate immunity - interferons.
-cytokines (complex glycoproteins) secreted by somatic cells in resp to viral inf & other stim
-antiviral, immunomodulation, anticancer
-no virus specificity
-RNA virus induce INF more strongly than DNA viruses
-INF orally inactive = administered via parenteral route (inj)
Describe the different types of interferons of innate immunity.
based on antigenic & chemical differences
1. Type I
-INFa:
>leukocyte interferon
>made in lg quantities by plasmacytoid dendritic cells
-IFN B
>secreted by virus inf fibroblast
2. Type II
-IFNy
>immunoregulatory
>made by antigen stim T cells & NK cells
3. Type III
-IFNy1, IFNy2, IFNy3
>recent discovery
>in resp to viral inf & activation of TLRs
>immunoregulator
Describe the roles of Type I IFNs in innate immunity.
- Inhibit virus replication in host cells
- Activate NK cells to kill inf cells
- Inc expression of MHCI & antigen presentation
- Stim differentiation of monocytes into dendritic cells
- Maturation of dendritic cells
- Stim memory T cell prolif
Describe how type I IFNs inhibit virus replication in innate immunity.
-activate latent ribonuclease ‘RNAse L’ -> degrades viral RNA
-syn Mx proteins that bind & trap viral nucleocapsid & inhibit virus assembly
-syn of protein kinase R (PKR) = prevent initiation of translation of viral RNA
Describe adaptive immunity.
- Humoral & cellular immunity
- Humoral = Ab released from B lymphocytes
- Cellular = T lymphocytes
- Antigen specific -> take days to develop
>mediated by lymphocytes that have surface receptors specific to each pathogen - Long term memory after inf
- Internal viral antigens -> protective cell mediated immune (CMI) response
- Surface antigens -> protective humoral & CMI resp
Describe antibody mediated immunity (humoral immunity) - adaptive immunity.
-Ab directed against viral proteins on free virions (capsid or envelope) OR against viral proteins expressed on surface of inf cells
Describe antiviral effects of antibodies - adaptive immunity.
- Virus neutralization
-neutralizing antibodies prevent virus attachment & entry into host cells
-bind to viral capsid or host envelope - Opsonization
-coating of virions w ab
-ab coated virion recog & phagocytosis by macrophages (sometimes neutrophils) - Clumping of viruses (immunocomplex formation)
- Activation of complement system
- Antibody dependent cell mediate cytotoxicity
Describe cell mediated immunity of adaptive immunity.
Describe evasion of the immune system.
- Antigenic plasticity
-rapid change in structure of viral ag = result of mutation, reassortment, recombination
-change in ag structure = virus become resistant to immunity gen by prev inf - Antigenic multiplicity
-antigenic variants w little to no cross reactivity - Neg cytokine regulation
-virokines: virus syn proteins that are homologs of cytokines/interferons
-viroreceptors: virus encode proteins that are homologous to the receptors for cytokines - Down reg MHC I
- Inhibition of complement activation
- Evasion of neutralizing antibodies
- Latency
- Cell to cell spread of viruses
- Inhibition of apoptosis