Immune response to, and immune evasion by fungi and parasites Flashcards

1
Q

Common fungal diseases

A
  • Fungal nail infections - common infections of the fingernails or toenails
  • Athletes foot, “Jock rash” – caused by Tinia pedis or Tinia cruris
  • “Thrush” /Vaginal candidiasis - caused by the yeast. Candida albicans, also called a “vaginal yeast infection”
  • “Oral thrush” - Candida infections of the mouth, throat, and oesophagus
  • Ringworm - A common fungal skin infection that often looks like a circular rash
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2
Q

More serious fungal infections (opportunistic)

A

*Invasive candidiasis
- A serious infection that can affect the blood,
heart, brain, eyes, bones and other parts of the
body
*Aspergillosis
- An infection caused by Aspergillus, a common
mold that lives indoors and outdoors
*Candida auris
- Emerging, often multidrug-resistant fungus found in healthcare settings
*Cryptococcus neoformans
- Can infect the brain, causing meningitis
*Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP)

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3
Q

Serious fungal infections are a consequence of compromised immunity

Describe this phenomenon

A
  • Compromised immunity is the most important
    predisposing factor for clinically significant fungal infections. Neutrophil deficiency as a result of bone marrow suppression or damage is frequently associated with such infections
  • Secondary infections associated with severe viral infections (Aspergillosis and ‘flu or COVID infections)
  • Opportunistic fungal infections are also associated with immunodeficiency caused by HIV and by therapy for disseminated cancer and transplant rejection
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4
Q

How well do we understand Immune responses to fungi

A

Less is known about antifungal immunity than
about immunity against bacteria and viruses.
This lack of knowledge is partly due to the paucity of animal models for mycoses and partly due to the fact that these infections
typically occur in individuals who are incapable of mounting effective immune responses

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5
Q

What makes fungi efficient activators of innate immunity?

A
  • Glucans are the most abundant polysaccharides in the cell walls of fungi, and their structures are highly variable
  • Glucans comprise glucose moieties joined through either alpha (α) or beta (β) linkages; they can be either linear or branched, and amorphous or microfibrillar
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6
Q

Fungal cell walls are recognised by PRRs
in DCs and macrophages

Describe these PRRs

A

The TLR family again plays an important role in this process, along with the mannose receptor
and complement receptors:
* TLR2 (which can cooperate with the b-glucan receptor dectin-1) recognizes fungal phospholipomannans, C. albicans yeasts, and A. fumigatus hyphae and conidia, and linear beta-1,2-oligomannoside structures ;
* TLR4/CD14 recognizes C. albicans, Aspergillus
fumigatus, and the glucuronoxylomannan capsule of C. neoformans. TLR4 is activated upon ligation of C. albicans O-linked mannans
* C-type lectin receptor family recognizes glucan and
mannan

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7
Q

What is the innate Immune responses to fungi?

A

The basic protective features of the skin and normal commensal flora are important in resistance to fungi.

Defensins have antifungal properties, and collectins such as MBL and the surfactant
proteins A and D can bind, aggregate, and opsonize fungi for phagocytosis. Phagocytes, particularly neutrophils and macrophages, are essential for killing fungi, either by:
* degranulation and release of toxic materials onto large indigestible hyphae; or
* ingestion of yeast or conidia.

The oxidative burst plays a crucial role in some antifungal responses

Recognition of fungi via this receptor promotes phagocytosis, triggers the respiratory burst and elicits inflammatory cytokine, chemokine and prostaglandin responses. TNF is one of these important cytokines

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8
Q

T cell-mediated immunity is critical for resistance to fungi

Describe this phenomenon

A

the dominant protective role of TH1 (and perhaps also TH17 T cells) and phagocyte activation, rather than antibody-mediated responses.

dependent upon T cell-mediated immunity, particularly CD4+ TH1 cells secreting IFNg and to a lesser extent CD8 T cells

The clinical relevance of TH1 versus TH2 responses is also clear for some human mycoses, for example:
* individuals with mild paracoccidioidomycosis have TH1-biased immune responses; whereas
* individuals with severe, disseminated infection have high levels of TH2 cytokines such as IL-4 and IL-10, and eosinophilia.

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9
Q

Describe the Immune evasion strategies of fungi

A

Fungal pathogens avoid detection by masking
pathogen-associated molecular patterns, such as cell wall carbohydrates:
* C. albicans masks b-glucan layer underneath a
coat of mannoprotein, which would otherwise be efficiently recognized by host dectin-1

Fungal pathogens can avoid detection by
downregulating the complement cascade:
* Cryptococcus neoformans secretes App1, a
small protein which binds to and inhibits
complement receptors
* C. albicans inhibits complement activity by
binding several complement regulatory factors,
including Factor H, FHL-1, and C4b-binding
protein (C4BP)

  • Cell size is an effective deterrent to ingestion: the multinucleate hyphal forms of C. albicans and Aspergillus fumigatus are not efficiently
    internalized
  • Once detected, various species interfere with
    phagocytosis and intracellular trafficking, and
    can repress production of antimicrobials like
    nitric oxide (NO)
  • dermatophytes suppress host T cell responses to delay cell-mediated destruction.
  • Histoplasma capsulatum is an obligate intracellular pathogen that evades macrophage killing by entering the cell via CR3 and then altering the normal pathways of phagosome maturation
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10
Q

Common helminths and parasites

A

Protozoa
* Entamoeba
* Leishmania (intracellular)
* Toxoplasma (intracellular)
* Trypanosomes (intracellular)
* Giardia
* Trichomonas
* Malaria (intracellular)

Helminths
* Nematodes
* Ascaris
* Schistomiasis
* Filaria

Ectoparasites
Ticks, fleas, lice

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11
Q

What is the Immune responses to parasites?

A

The principal immune response to intracellular protozoa is phagocytosis, which is much enhanced by cell-mediated immunity particularly macrophage activation by Th1 cell–
derived cytokines

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12
Q

Recognition of parasites is through surface molecules

Describe this

A

Some protozoa express surface molecules that are recognized by TLRs and activate phagocytes. Plasmodium species, Toxoplasma gondii, and Cryptosporidium species (a major cause of diarrheal disease in HIV-infected patients) all express glycolipids that can activate TLR2 and
TLR4.

  • T. gondii binds TLR11 via profilin and associates with TLR3, TLR7, and TLR9 via the endoplasmic reticulum protein UNC93B1;
  • TLR9 mediates innate immune activation by the malaria pigment hemozoin;
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13
Q

Many parasites are resistant to phagocytic killing and may even replicate within macrophages

Describe the Evasion by Leishmania

A

During primary infection in vivo, Leishmania
recruits neutrophils to the site of inoculation
following a sandfly bite, and survival within
these cells is important for productive infection.
IFN-g-induced MHCII and iNOS are blocked
by L. donovani, which disrupts nuclear
translocation of STAT1α by blocking the
interaction between STAT1a and importin-a5.

Leishmania are also potent inhibitors of IL-12
production by macrophages in vitro and in
vivo; as this cytokine plays a pivotal role in
Th1 responses, this activity is likely extremely
important in persistence in vivo.

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14
Q

Describe the Evasion by Toxoplasma gondii

A

Penetration of T. gondii into the host cell
results in formation of a membrane bound
vacuole that is primarily derived by
invagination of the host cell plasma membrane.
Toxoplasma is unique in being able to actively
penetrate both phagocytic and nonphagocytic
cells and set up residence in a nonfusigenic
vacuole. Residence in this vacuole is relatively
resistant to NO, ROI-mediated killing

The acute infection is characterized by fast
growing forms called tachyzoites, which lyse
their host cells within 24–48 hrs to release large
numbers of progeny. These are very
immunogenic. In response to immune pressure,
the parasite differentiates into a slow growing
form called a bradyzoite, which resides within
an intracellular cyst and is largely invisible to
antibodies

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15
Q

Describe the Evasion by Trypanosomes

A

T. cruzi infects and replicates in the cytoplasm
and is therefore relatively resistant to NO, ROI-
mediated killing

T. cruzi release from infected cells generates
strongly immunogenic material and host
species generate a robust antibody response to
the surface VSG protein

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16
Q

Parasites evade protective immunity by
reducing their immunogenicity

Describe this

A

Parasites change their surface antigens during their life cycle in
vertebrate hosts. Two forms of antigenic variation are well
defined:

  • Stage-specific change in antigen expression, such that the mature tissue stages of parasites produce antigens different from those of the infective stages. For example, the infective sporozoite stage of malaria parasites is
    antigenically distinct from the merozoites that reside in the host and are responsible for chronic infection. By the time the immune system has responded to infection by sporozoites, the parasite has differentiated,
    expresses new antigens, and is no longer a target for immune elimination
  • Continually changing surface antigen expression – e.g. Trypanosomes and Entamoeba
17
Q

Describe the Antigenic variation in T. brucei

A
  • The sleeping sickness parasite, Trypanosoma
    brucei, is covered with variant surface glycoproteins (VSGs) recognized by the host’s immune system; the VSG is so densely packed that it obscures other cell-surface components from immune recognition
  • The VSG coat is highly antigenic and stimulates a very strong immune response that wipes out most of the parasite population
  • T. brucei has nearly 2,000 functioning and
    nonfunctioning VSG genes
  • At any time, a few parasites in a population will stochastically switch the VSG gene that is
    expressed. As previous variants are recognized by the immune system and cleared, newly switched variants emerge, giving rise to characteristic waves of parasitaemia
18
Q
A

at any moment, only one ES promoter is fully active, resulting in a single type of VSG being expressed.
This monoallelic VSG expression ensures that after a VSG switching event, the originally active VSG no longer is expressed on the cell surface.

  • The diversity of the VSGs required to maintain an
    extended infection exceeds the number of functional
    genes responsible for encoding them
  • VSG genes rearrange to generate this diversity
  • Segmental gene conversion events have been
    demonstrated in both Trypanosoma equiperdum and
    T. brucei infections generating `mosaic’ VSGs that
    were not previously encoded in the genome
19
Q

Describe the Immunity to malaria

A
  • It was thought for many years that antibodies
    were the major protective mechanism against
    malaria, and early attempts at vaccinating
    against this infection focused on generating
    antibodies
  • It is now apparent that the CTL response
    against parasites residing in hepatocytes is an
    important defence against the spread of this
    intracellular protozoan
20
Q

Eosinophils and mast cells are needed to
clear helminth infections

Describe this

A
  • Most helminth parasites are too large to be phagocytized, and the IgE system is believed to have evolved as a mechanism for dealing with these larger invaders
  • IgE is the link that connects eosinophils to the outer surface of a parasitic worm
  • IgE-bound pathogens bind to high affinity FceRI and FceRII receptors found on the surface of eosinophils and mast cells (and basophils)
  • The large cytoplasmic granules of eosinophils contain a variety of proteases and toxic proteins that, in aggregate, can often kill larval intestinal parasites to which the eosinophils are attached
  • Mast cells (activated by IL-5 and coated by IgE) degranulate and release histamine, serotonin and leukotriene at the site of infection. These can cause contractions of the smooth muscle cells of the intestinal walls as a physical mechanism for expelling the worms from the digestive tract.
21
Q

Describe Th2 cells

A
  • Th2 cells help to control parasitic infections by
    promoting IgE production and by promoting the function of eosinophils and mast cells
  • Produce IL-4, IL-5 and IL-13
22
Q

Immune responses to Helminths

A
23
Q

Describe the Evasion strategies by helminths

A
  • Too large to be ingested by phagocytes
  • Many helminths have thick integuments that make them resistant to the cytocidal mechanisms of neutrophils and macrophages
  • Some helminths may activate the alternative
    pathway of complement, but they have developed resistance to complement-mediated lysis (unclear how)