Lecture 8 Flashcards
1
Q
What are the four types of immuno-pathologies?
A
1. Insufficiency of immune response • Inherited and acquired immunodeficiencies 2. Over-activity of the immune response • Hypersensitivities & allergies 3. Disruptions to self-tolerance • Autoimmune disease 4. Neoplasia’s and the immune system • Lymphomas and leukemias
2
Q
What type of immunodeficiency would cause pyogenic (pus forming) bacteria?
A
- antibody, phagocytes, complement
3
Q
What type of immunodeficiency would cause fungal infection?
A
- CD4+ T cells, antibody
4
Q
What type of immunodeficiency would cause viral/intracellular bacteria?
A
- CD8+ T cells, natural killer cells
5
Q
What is a type 1-hypersensitivity?
A
- IgE mediates mast cell degranulation
6
Q
What is a type 2- hypersensitivity?
A
- IgG mediated cellular toxicity
7
Q
What is a type 3-hypersensitivity?
A
- Immune complex mediated (IgG, IgM)
8
Q
What is involved in a type 4 hypersensitivity?
A
- Cell mediated CD4 or CD8
- Delayed type (DTH)
9
Q
Explain the mechanisms of Type 1- hypersensitivity:
A
- The pollen is phagocytosed by a dendritic cell that then activates a naive T-cell turning it into a TH2 helper cell
- The TH2 cell then helps a IGE class switching B cell
- This then stimulates the production of an IGE secreting B-cell
- The binding of IgE to FcRI on mast cells then occurs
- Repeat exposure to the allergen then occurs
- Activation of mast cell then stimulates the release of mediators
- Mediators include vasoactive amines and lipid mediators that cause immediate hypersensitivity reaction (minutes after repeat exposure to the allergen). Furthermore, a late phase reaction occurs (2-24 hours after exposure to initial antigen)
10
Q
Briefly explain why immunological self tolerance occurs:
A
- All body proteins have the capacity to be an antigen
- Potentially self reactive lymphocytes and randomly generated during development
- The immune system must be educated to “tolerate” or ignore self proteins, but still respond to foreign material (most self reactive lymphocytes are screened and deleted during maturation)
- This is not 100% effective however as some self-reactive lymphocytes escape deletion and must be controlled in periphery (peripheral tolerance)
11
Q
What are the mechanisms of self tolerance?
A
- Ignorance
- Anergy
- Apoptosis
- Regulation