Immunology Flashcards

1
Q

What is the evidence for the hygiene hypothesis?

A

More allergies in western world
First child more likely to be allergic
Farm children less like to be allergic- endotoxin exposure
Lack of exposure to germs early in life skew our CD4 T cells away from Th1 to Th2 phenotype of mast cell activation, IgE class switching, eosinophil activation and recruitment

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2
Q

What are the classification of hypersensitivity mechanisms?

A

Type 1- IgE mediated mast cell degranulation and activated eosinophils eg. Anaphylaxis, venom/drug/food allergy
Type 2- antibodies produced by immune system bind antigens on the patients own cell surfaces and cause damage eg. Autoimmune haemolytic anaemia
Type 3- immune-complex reaction between circulating antigen and IgG eg. Serum sickness
Type 4- cellular immune response mediated by T cells eg. Contact dermatitis

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3
Q

What is the significance of IgE in allergies?

A

Antigen binds specific IgE
Binds allergy effector cells via FcER1
Cross linking of IgE in mast cells by allergen lead to activation

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4
Q

List some mast cell mediators and their effects

A
Histamine
Prostaglandins
Leukotrienes
PAF
Tryptase
-vasodilation, vascular permeability, heart rate and cardiac contraction, glandular secretion, bronchoconstriction
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5
Q

Describe the killing of parasites

A

The evolutionary purpose of IgE mediated responses
Recognised by mast cells
IgE attaches to the parasite
Eosinophils bind to IgE
Parasite killed with toxic granules and O2-
IL13 from effector cells causes goblet cell hyperplasia and mucus production, increased contraction of smooth muscle in the gut leading to work expulsion

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6
Q

Why do people get allergies?

A

Genes- polymorphisms (IL4 receptor or FrE receptor)
Fillaggrin- eczema
Environment- early exposure, infections, hygiene, maternal smoking, diet, air pollution, chlorine

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7
Q

Describe complement deficiency

A

C3 deficiency- pyogenic infections
C5-9 deficiencies are associated with Neisseria
C1,4,2 deficiencies are linked to immune complex disease

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8
Q

Describe some neutrophil disorders

A

Clinical presentation with septicaemia with bacteria and fungi, abscesses, dental cavities and mouth ulcers
Adhesion- LFA1 deficiency
Motility
Killing- chronic granulomatous disease- fungal and Staph. Infections, no respiratory burst, failure to activate enzymes, X-linked
Neutropenia

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9
Q

Describe defects in phagocyte activation

A

Toll receptors- Myd88 deficiency associated with severe bacterial infections
IL12 and IL12R deficiency- salmonella and atypical mycobacteria
Interferon-gamma deficiency- atypical mycobacteria
(IL12 and IFNgamma not associated with viral infections and fungi

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10
Q

Describe the result of a deficiency in natural killer cells

A

Overwhelming infections with herpesvirus
Human cytomegalovirus have mechanisms that prevent the expression of HLA class1 which normally is a trigger for NK cells to kill

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11
Q

Describe clinical features of B cell defects

A

Recurrent pyogenic infections
Upper and lower respiratory tract infections
Diarrhoea
Encapsulated organisms (streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, staphylococcus aureus)
Rare viruses
Fungal infections uncommon

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12
Q

Describe live-attenuated vaccines

A

The pathogenic virus if isolated and grown in non-permissive cells that encourage mutations that attenuate growth in the original host cells
Product viruses are screened for those with the correct antigens to produce an immunogenic response
Eg. Measles and Sabin type 3 polio vaccines

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13
Q

Describe inactivated vaccines

A

Virus is inactivated with UV, chemicals or heat

Eg. The inactivated polio vaccine (IPV)

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14
Q

Compare attenuated and inactivated vaccines

A

Not all pathogens can be grown in alternative hosts and the yield is low therefore the cost is high
Both have a limited shelf life and often require refrigeration
Risk of incomplete inactivation and reversal of attenuation
Immunity from an attenuated vaccine is more enduring

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15
Q

Describe passive immunisation

A

Transfer off antibodies
Short lasting but immediate effect
Occurs naturally during breast feeding
Used as an antidote to acute toxins and sometimes in acute infection

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16
Q

Describe recombinant vaccines

A

Virulent components are removed from virus proteins and DNA so they do not cause disease

17
Q

Describe herd immunity

A

Not everyone needs to be vaccinated
90% vaccination rate should prevent disease spread
Some people cannot be vaccinated- young children, old people and immunosuppressed or immunodeficiency

18
Q

What do adjuvents do in vaccination?

A

Improve the effectiveness of vaccines by increasing the antigenicity if the antigen
1. Changes the physically state- particulates are engulfable
2. Creates an inflammatory environment to attract cells and increase the activation of those cells
Adjuvants may be adsorbed onto crystal surface or held within the adjuvent and act directly on cells
Or act indirectly through danger signals

19
Q

Briefly describe mechanisms of adjuvent action

A

Antigen depot (?)
Attract innate cells to the area
Activate migrated cells
Inflammation
Debdritic cells then migrate to draining lymph
Alum crystals- 10% left after 24 hours, induce CCL2-4 and IL8 and induces the maturation of monocytes to macrophages
MF59- 10% left after 6 hours, also induce CLL2-4, IL8 and chemokine and cytokine production in migrated cells

20
Q

List some adjuvents in use

A

Aluminium salt gels (alum) eg. Aluminium potassium sulfate
Oil in water eg. Squalene/MF59
Saponin based eg. Quil-A
TLR agonists eg. Complete Freund’s adjuvent

21
Q

What are conjugate vaccines?

A

If the antigen is not a peptides then there is a T cell independent response, put the antigen with a protein and the T cells will respond and long lasting immunity to that antigen will be established

22
Q

What’s CAR?

A

Chimeric antigenic receptor
DNA that codes for antibodies is inserted into T cells that give it specificity to something eg. Cancer cells
Van also insert co-stimulator portions to maintain the T cell response and DNA coding for cytokines
However T cells must overcome tumour immunosuppression

23
Q

Describe mechanisms of loss of tolerance

A

Ignorance/immune privilege
Break ignorance leads to production of T cells against antigens previously invisible to the immune system
Cell death
Normally T cells that present self antigens die but under infection they can be activated
Loss of regulatory cells
Contributory genetic factors to autoimmunity

24
Q

Describe some organ specific autoimmune diseases

A

Rheumatoid arthritis- associated with auto antibodies in most patients, inflammation leads to joint damage- anti-citrullinated protein antibodies (ACPA)-present in 60% are associated with severe disease
Hashimoto’s thyroiditis- anti-TSH receptor IgG blocks TSH binding and function, induces thyroid tissue destruction
Grave’s disease- anti-TSH receptor IgG continuously stimulates TSH leading to cell division and thymidine release Can be temporary passed into a foetus in utero
Goodpasture’s syndrome- specific antibodies to the capillary basement membrane of glonerukus and lung alveoli
Type 1 diabetes- specific antibodies to beta cells in the islets of Langerhans are produced which kill the celkks and stop insulin production

25
Q

Give an example of systemic autoimmunity

A

Systemic lupus erythematosus- antibodies against nuclear proteins. Immune complexes of soluble auto-antigens in the kidney

26
Q

Define outbreak

A

An occurrence of a disease clearly in excess of normal expectancy

27
Q

Define Endogenous

A

Infection derived from normal flora

28
Q

Define Exogenous

A

Infection derived from microbes in the environment

29
Q

Define zoonosis

A

An animal disease which can spread to humans

30
Q

Define vector

A

A living creature which can transmit infection from one host to another

31
Q

Describe routes of entry

A
Direct contact
Inhalation
Ingestion
Inoculation
In through mouth to GIT or lungs
Conjunctiva
Through skin
Urogenital tract
32
Q

Describe types of outbreaks

A

Point outbreak- group of individuals exposed to a single source of infection at a defined point in time
Common source- group of individuals exposed to a single source but at differing times
Person-to-person- no common source, chain of infection between individuals

33
Q

What is the difference between case control and cohort studies?

A

Case control- retrospective
Exposure histories sought from cases and healthy controls
Controls chosen from the same population as cases
Relative risk of exposure to postulated source of outbreak is calculated for cases and controls
Relatively cheap
Cohort study- prospective study, disease outcomes compared between two groups; those exposed to a suspected source and those not exposed
More time consuming and expensive

34
Q

Describe prevention and control of infection

A

Primary- pre-exposure immunisation, improve living conditions and life style- safe food, hygiene, safe sex
Secondary- post-exposure immunisation, contact tracing, screening of food handlers, chemoprophylaxis, surveillance
Tertiary- treatment of acute infection, management of post infectious disorders