Innate immunity - in health and disease Flashcards
What is innate immunity?
- First line of defence (initial response to injuries)
- Reacts to microbes and injuries of cells/tissues
- Rapid
- Prevents, controls and can eliminate infections
- Many pathogens have evolved to resist/evade
- Keeps infections in check by activating the adaptive immune system
What are the components of the IIS?
- Barriers - physical, chemical, biological
- Effector cells - phagocytes, NK cells, innate lymphoid cells, lymphocytes with limited diversity
- Soluble molecules - effector proteins (complement), inflammatory mediators (cytokines)
What are the different barriers we have against pathogens?
- Epithelial surfaces - skin, mucosa of GI/resp tract. Physical barrier to prevent entry
- Chemical barriers - antibacterial enzymes/peptides. Destroy pathogens
- Microbiological barrier - normal flora gives competition
How can the barriers fail?
- Loss of barrier integrity predisposes to infection - wounds/burns
- Genetic defects - CF: mucus produced more viscous, inhibits ciliary movements. Causes freq. lung infections
What are NK cells?
- recognise infected (eg virus) and stressed cells (eg tumours) and kill them - dont need prior activation like CTL
- express cytotoxic enzymes - perforin (creates pores in cell) and granzymes A/B (lyse cell)
- produce IFN-gamma to activate macrophages
How do NK cells and macrophages cooperate with each other?
- Macrophages produce IL-12, which activates NK cells
- NK cells then produce IFN-gamma, activating macrophage to enhance its killing
How do NK cells recognise target cells?
- Have inhibitory and activating receptors
- Inhibitory receptors recognise ligands on healthy cells
- All nucleated cells have MHC I, which is recognised by inhibitory receptor, blocking the activating receptors (stops attack of healthy autologous cell)
- Activating receptors recognise infected/ stressed cells
- The outcome of the NK interaction is determined by the integration of the 2 signals
What happens with NK and healthy cells?
- Healthy cell has MHC class I
- Inhibitory receptor recognises this and stops the activation
- No cell killing
What happens with NK and virus-infected and malignant cells?
- Activating receptors recognise ligands that are induced on unhealthy cells
- Both downregulate the expression of MHC I
- Inhibitory receptors are not ligated by MHC I, signals from activating receptors arent blocked, NK cells attack and kill the cell
How do the NK receptors cause their actions?
- Cytoplasmic tails of inhibitory receptors have immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibitory motif (ITIM) - engages phosphatases that block the signalling pathways triggered by activating receptors
- Activating receptors have immunoreceptor tyrosine-base activation motif (ITAM)
- ITAMs engage protein TK-mediated events - promotes target cell killing and cytokine secretion by NK cells
- ITAMs may be located in cytosolic portion of adaptor molecules (DAP12)
How do NK cells kill the target cells?
- Perforin forms pores in the membrane, allowing delivery of granzymes
- Granzyme A,b,c initiate apoptosis by activating caspases
- Granzyme B can trigger mitochondrial apoptotic pathway
What defects can we have in NK cells?
- Part of broader immunodeficiency (Chediak-Higashi)
- Complete absence of circulating NK cells
- Functional NK cell deficiencies (normal numbers)
- HSV - fatal viral infections
What are innate lymphoid cells (ILCs)?
- Lymphocyte-like cells - have similar functions but dont express TCRs and have no clonal expansion/ differentiation properties
- Ready to act - produce cytokines
- Faster responses as innate immunity
- 3 different types depending on cytokine activation
What are the 3 classes of ILCs?
- ILC1 (Th1-like) = produces IFN-g -> defence against viruses
- ILC2 (Th2-like) = produces IL-5 + IL-13 -> allergic inflammation
- ILC3 (Th17-like) = IL-17 + IL-22 -> intestinal barrier function; lymphoid organogenesis
What are lymphocytes with limited diversity?
- Combine features of lymphocytes and innate cells
- Express Ag receptors (TCR, BCR)
- Recognise rather limited number of Ags
- Respond in early stages of immune response
- 4 types: gamma/delta T cells; NK-T cells; B-1 B cells; MZB cells
What are gamma delta T cells?
- Most T cells have alpha beta TCR, few have gamma delta TCR
- Less diverse TCRs
- Recognise Ags that arent peptides
- Local protection in epithelia
What are NK-T cells?
- Express TCR (less diverse recognition)
- Also express cell surface markers found on NK cells
- Present in epithelia and lymphoid organs
- recognise lipids bound to CD1 (MHC-1 related molecule)
What are B-1 B cells?
- peritoneal cavity, mucosal tissue (not lymphoid or BM)
- produce mainly natural low-affinity IgM, directed against polysaccharide and lipid ags
- Fast response to bacteria in the gut
What are Marginal zone B cells (MZBs)?
- Found in spleen and lymph nodes
- Produce mainly IgM class abs, directed against polysaccharide
- Rapid responses to polysaccharide-rich blood-borne bacteria
What do phagocytes do?
- indentify, ingest and destroy pathogens
- e.g. neutrophils, macrophages and DCs
- protection from pathogens
- disposal of damaged/dying (apoptotic) cells
- processing and presentation of antigens (Ag)
- Chemotaxis to site of infection, attach and engulf the microbe
- lysosome-phagosome fusion - kill them in phagolysosome
What phagocyte defects are there?
- Chronic granulomatous disease
- Chediak-Higashi
- Leukocyte adhesion defects (LADs)
What is chronic granulomatous disease?
- Mutation in NADPH component
- Defect in oxidative burst
- Usually in phagolysosome, the oxygen will be converted into a superoxide anion -
reacts with water to make more ROS - killing the microbe - Cannot make this in CGD, so cant kill phagocytosed microbe -> recurrent infections
What is Chediak-Higashi syndrome?
- Caused by rare genetic disease, causing defective lysosomal trafficking regulator (LYST)
- Leads to defective phagosome-lysosome fusion - pathogens cant be killed and so causes recurrent infections
- Also get neutropenia
- giant granules in the cytosol of neutrophils - cant kill microbes
What are leukocyte adhesion defects?
- Defect in b2-chain integrins (LFA-1, Mac-1) - decreased no. of integrins on phagocytes
- Defect in selectin ligand
- Defective neutrophil chemotaxis
- Means that neutrophils cannot get from the blood into the tissues
What are TLRs?
- Recognise pathogens
- present on phagocytes, mucosal epithelial cells and enodthelial cells
- TLR1,2,4,5 are on cell surface -> detect EC pathogens
- TLR3,7,8,9 inside cells -> detect microbial nucleic acids
What happens if there are defects in TLRs?
- Defect in signalling - MyD88 defect leads to bacterial pneumonia
- Polymorphism in TLR genes predisposes to bacterial infections, asthma and autoimmunity
What deficiencies are there in complement proteins?
- C2, 4, 1q deficiency -> SLE-like syndrome
- C3 deficiency -> frequent serious infections with pyogenic bacteria
- C5-9 (MAC) deficiency -> disseminated infections with neisseria
What deficiencies are there in complement regulatory proteins?
C1 INH deficiency
- Increased cleavage of C4 and C2
- Oedema in skin/mucosa -> abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhoea, airway obstruction
- hereditary angioedema
DAF, CD59 deficiency
- recurrent intravascular haemolysis (RBC lysis)
- paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria