Hypersensitivity and Allergy Flashcards
What is a hypersensitivity reaction?
An immune response, that is an overreaction to a harmless substance which causes inflammation and tissue damage.
What are the different types of hypersensitivity?
What is similar about them all?
Classified at I to IV
All contain components of the adaptive immune system.
What conditions tend to show a type 1 hypersensitivity reaction?
Allergic rhinitis
Allergic asthma
Eczema
What conditions tend to show a type II hyper sensitivity reaction?
Some drug allergies
Chronic urticaria
What conditions tend to show a type III hypersensitivity reaction?
Serum sickness (aka antibodies against anti-venom plasma)
Arthus reaction (after a vaccination)
What conditions tend to be type IV hypersensitivity reactions?
Macrophages activation - allergic contact dermatitis
Eosinophil activation - chronic asthma, chronic allergic rhinits
Cytotoxicity - graft rejection, allergic contact, dermatitis to poison ivy.
Basic terms
What is a type 1 hypersensitivity response?
IgE major player
Binds to soluble antigens - forms immunecomplex
Results in mainly mast cell activation (normally an anti-parasitic response) - degradation has rapid and delay immune/inflammatory response to harmless antigen.
Basic
What is a type 2 hypersensitivity reaction?
Characterised by IgG
IgG binds to cell bound antigen.
Mimics anti-bacterial response against a harmless antigen.
Results in complement and phagocytes activation
Basic
What is a type 3 hypersensitivity reaction?
Characterised by IgG
Binds to soluble antigen - form a immune complex
Activates complement and phagocytes.
Basic
What are the different types of a type 4 hypersensitivity reaction?
Cell mediated - triggered by soluble or cell bound antigens
A. Macrophages activation by Th1
B. Th2 activate eosinophils
C. Cytotoxicity.
What is the normal function of IgE?
Removal of extracellular parasites, particularly multicellular helminths, too large to be phagocytosed.
Carries out this response by binding to receptors on surface of mast cells, eosinophils and basophils (granulocytes).
What are the normal effects of IgE response in different areas of the body?
Respiratory tract - sneezing, coughing, increased mucus flow
Skin - itch induced scratching
Gastrointesinsal tract - vomiting, diarrhoea
These are all physiological to help remove parasites from the body.
Where are mast cells mostly found?
Tisse resident cells
Mainly in mucosal tissues near body surfaces
Connective tissue near blood vessels
What is the role of a mast cell in a hypersensitivity response?
Express Fc epsilon receptor on surface
Binds to constant region of IgE
Leads to mast cell with mainly surface bound IgE, with a range of specificities awaiting activation.
When IgE antigen binds - IgE crosslikned - signalling complexes brought together - activates the mast cell to degranulate.
What are some of the mediators released from mast cells?
Enzymes - carboxypeptidase
Amines - histamine
Proteoglycan - heparin
Cytokines - TNF alpha
Chemokines - CCL3
Lipid mediators - platelet activating factor, Prostaglandins and leukotrienes
What is the role of enzymes released by mast cells?
Are preformed in granules
Includes tryptase, chymase, cathepsin G, carboxypeptidase
Help remodel connective tissue - remove parasite bound in connective tissue - also damage proteins on the surface of the parasite.
What is the role of amines released by mast cells>
Are preformed in granules
Includes histamine
Increased vascular permeability and vasodilation, causes smooth muscle contraction (in bronchioles) - aids wound healing.
What is the role of cytokines produced by mast cells?
Some are preformed in granules such as TNF-alpha - this promotes inflammation, activation of multiple types of leukocytes and activated endothelium - so increased permeability
Some are synthesised during allergic reaction
IL-4, IL-13 - stimulate and amplify Th2 responses
IL-3, IL-5. GM-CSF - promote eosinophil production and activation
What is the role of chemokines produced by mast cells?
Are synthesised during the allergic reaction
CCL3, CXCL8 - attract monocytes, macrophages and neutrophils
What is the role of lipid mediators produced by mast cells?
Synthesised during the allergic reaction
Prostglandins D2, E2 - increase vascular permeability
Leukotrienes C4, D4 and E4 - smooth muscle contraction and mucus secretion.
Platelet activating factor - recruit and activate leukocytes, amplify lipid mediates, activates neuts, eosin and platelets.
What is the basic role of eosinophils involved in type 1 hypersensitivity reactions?
Present in small numbers in the blood
Found in connective tissue under mucosal surfaces
Have recepros for IgE on surface
Contain preformed toxic mediators in granules which are released when receptor crosslinking occurs.
Can also secrete cytokines - contribute to an inflammatory response.
Mainly associated with parasitic or hypersensitive responses.
What pre-formed toxic mediators do eosinophils contain?
What do they do>
MBP - major basic protein - mainy roles - damage cell membrane to increase permeability, stimulate masts to release histamine, increase superoxide formation in alveolar macrophages
ECP - eosinophil cationic protein - cytotoxic and non-cytotoxic activity.
What activates eosinophils in a type 1 hypersensitivity reaction>
Th2 cells
- secrete cytokines (IL-5) that promotes development and survival of eosinophils
- stimulates activated endothelial and epithelial cells to release chemokines (eotaxin) to recruit eosinophils to site of inflammation
Eosinophils give a later response than masts.
What is the role of basophils in a type 1 hypersensitivity reaction?
Are minor numbers in peripheral blood and not normally found in peripheral tissue
Can be recruited to site of inflam and activates by PAMPs, cytokines, lipid mediator and IgE.
Express Fc epsilon receptor - degranulate on crosslinking of receptors.
Release histamine
Release cytokines such a IL-4 and IL-13 may initiate Th2 response
May help B cell switch to produce IgE.
In a type 1 hypersensitiviy reaction what in basic terms happens on initial exposure to an harmless antigen?
Allergen enters the body - mainly invades mucosal surfaces
Antigen is picked up and presented on a PAPC
In lymph node Activated T and B cells respectively, activated B cell undergoes class switching to IgE.
Plasma cell produced IgE becomes bound to Fc epsilon receptor on the surface of mast cells.
Allergen has normally gone so not activated.
This is known as sensitisation
Why is the antigen normally gone at the end of the sensitisation phase of hypersensitivity reactions?
Allergen is gone
Is potentially a combination of factors
Only present originally in small number, can be cleared by innate pathways whilst the adaptive immune response takes longer to produce IgE antibodies, by time IgE produced antigen has been cleared.