Immunology 1 - The immune response to infection Flashcards
Incomplete - excludes basics and material that is mentioned in subsequent lectures
What are the constitutive barriers to infection?
Skin
Mucosal surfaces
Commensal bacteria (compete for scarce resources and produce fatty acids + bactericidins to inhibit pathogen growth)
What are the features of skin that provide a barrier to infection?
Tightly packed keratinised cells
Low pH and low O2 tension
Sebaceous glands which produce:
- Hydrophobic oils that repel microorganisms and water
- Lysozyme which destroys the structural integrity of the cell wall
- Ammonia and defensins which have antibacterial properties
What features of the mucosal surfaces provide a barrier to infection?
Cilia that trap and remove pathogens
Secreted mucous which acts as a physical barrier and produces:
- Secretory IgA (prevent attachment/entry into epithelia)
- Lysozyme
- Lactoferrins which starve microorganisms of iron
What are the cells of the innate immune system?
What are the soluble components of the innate immune system?
Cells
Polymorphonuclear cells:
- Neutrophils, eosinophils, basophils
Monocytes and macrophages
NK cells
Dendritic cells
Soluble components
Complement, acute phase proteins, cytokines, chemokines
What is the main difference in function between neutrophils and macrophages?
Macrophages can present antigen on their surface following phagocytosis, but neutrophils cannot
What are macrophages called in the:
Liver
Kidney
Bone
Spleen
Lung
Neural tissue
Connective tissue
Skin
Joints
Liver = Kuppfer cell
Kidney = Mesangial cell
Bone = Osteoclast
Spleen = Sinusoidal lining cell
Lung = Alveolar macrophage
Neural tissue = Microglia
Connective tissue = Histiocyte
Skin = Langerhans cell
Joints = Macrophage-like synoviocyte
Give two examples of pattern recognition receptor
Toll like receptor
Mannose receptor
How is pus formed?
Following phagocytosis, neutrophils die
When they die, they release residual enzymes which causes the liquefication of closely adjacent material
This forms pus
What is opsonisation?
Modification of a pathogen to attract it to a NK or phagocytic cell
May be mediated by antibodies, complement components or acute phase proteins
Enables phagocytosis
What is the difference between oxidative and non-oxidative killing?
Oxidative: uses NADPH oxidase and myeloperoxidase to form hydrochlorous acid - this acts as an oxidant and anti-microbial
Non-oxidative: release of lysosymes and lactoferrin into the phagolysosome
What role do NK cells play in regulating immunity?
Express inhibitory receptors for self-HLA molecules
If the cell’s self-HLA molecule is down regulated (e.g. because it is infected), it becomes a target cell -> lysis
Describe the changes that occurs in dendritic cells following phagocytosis
Dendritic cells mature after phagocytosis -> represents the innate-adaptive transition
- Upregulate expression of HLA-1
- Express costimulatory molecules
- Migrate via lymphatics to lymph nodes (mediated by CCR7)
- Process non-self antigen and present it to T cells in lymph nodes to prime the adaptive immune response
- Express cytokines to regulate the immune response
What are the primary lymphoid organs and their function?
Bone marrow: B + T cell production, B cell maturation
Thymus: T cell maturation
What is a secondary lymphoid organ?
Anatomical sites of interaction between naive lymphocytes and antigens e.g. spleen, lymph nodes and MALT (mucosa associated lymphoid tissue)
Describe the process of T cell maturation
Haematopoietic stem cells begin to mature in the bone marrow
Undergo TcR rearrangement in which alpha and beta chain segments are rearranged in a semi-random manner
Migrate to thymus as pre-T cells where they undergo selection for CD4 and CD8
Low affinity for HLA - not selected
Medium affinity - positive selection of ~10% of original cells
- Affinity for HLA class 1 = CD8+ differentiation
- Affinity for HLA class 2 = CD4+ differentiation
High affinity - negative selection to avoid autoreactivity (central tolerance)
Recall 2 functions of CD4+ T lymphocytes
Recognise peptides presented on HLA class II molecules
Immunoregulatory functions via cell-cell interactions and cytokine expression -> provides help for development of:
- Full B cell response
- Some CD8+ T cell responses