Microbiology 3: interferon Flashcards

1
Q

What is the overall strategy for the immune system to defeat viruses?

A

Inital physical barriers-skin, mucus, etc –intrinsic barrier
Then if they pass that-innate immunity (mins/hours after start)
Then if can pass that-acquired immunity-targetted, specific, but can cause large tissue damage (days/weeks)
and virus can evade or counteract that as well-trouble

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2
Q

What is CpG and ZAP and their relation to basic initial immunity?

A

Viruses tend to have different amounts of CpG islands on their DNA and can be recognised as foreign
ZAP machinery is a DNA exosome that recognises these CpG content and is chopped us automatically
Viruses with low CpG can pass by

insects dont have ZAP, so insects viruses dont modulate CpG->when infect humans get automatically destroyed
this is non specific, non cellular-nearly like intrinsic immunity

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3
Q

WHat is the definition of interferons?

A

A generic protein (non specific) produced by the cell to protect itself and stop viral infection
Soluble protein that protect the cell, and spreads to nearby cells -> through receptor cause cells to produce many new genes, to protect themselves againt infection
Antiviral state

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4
Q

What are type I interferons?

A

Earliest interferons to switch on. INF I receptors on every cell of the body
polypeptides secreted from infected cell
Induce antimicrobial state in that cell and neighbours
Modulate innate immune response to promote Ag presentation to NK
Also help activate acquired immunity

ex: INFa, INFbeta (primary one-any cell can make, any cell has receptor)
Response can happen in epithelium, then if it passes, repeat in fibroblast, of pass that, immune cells can also be induced, producing INFa -> these are professional INF cells

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5
Q

What are TypeI, II and III interferons?

A

I-INFa, B -> secreted by all cells and bind IFNAR receptor in all tissue
Plasmacytoid dentritic cells pdcs are specialist INFa secreting cells
One gene for INFb, 13/14 isotypes of Alpha

II-INFgamma->produced by activated T cells and NK cells
Receptor IFNGR

Type III-INFlamba
Signal through IL28 and IL10B on epithelial cells-important in very early response
Polymorphisms can determine susceptibility to viruses like HCV or HBV

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6
Q

How does a cell recognises its being infected?

A

Recognise danger signals, anything that looks foreign-> PAMPs
Pattern recognition receptors in cytosol
Usually sense foreign nucleic Acid (like if it doesnt have the right cap, or if its cytosol, or other)

eg: cytoplasmic RIG-I like receptor, endosomal Tolllike receptor TLR and others (PRR)

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7
Q

What do TLR, RLR and DNA sensors recognise?

A

TLR-RNA in endosome
RLR-RNA
DNA sensors-DNA

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8
Q

How does RLR work and produce an effector response?

A

Viral RNA arrive in cytosol -if recognised as foreign (no cap, or something)
RIG and MDA5 can recognise it and form a complex it with MAVS (on mito membrane) -> signals down cascades until phosphorylation of Irf3 or Irf7
phospho-Irf3 dimersises and acts as a TF-> activate transcription of INFB

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9
Q

How does TLR work and produce an effector response?

A

TLR sit in endosomes
Viruses often use endosomes to enter cells -> and unpack there
TLR3 and TLR7/8 when bind RNA viral activate and signal

TLR3 joins up with RLR pathway and actiavte IrF3
TLR7/8 activates Irf7/8 (always present in Plasmacytoid dentritic cells)-Act as TF and produce INFa

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10
Q

How does DNA sensors and produce an effector response against viruses?

A

cGAS is enzyme, activates when binds dsDNA in cytosol
When activated, becomes cGAMP
cGAMP recognised by STING-on surface of RER
kind of joins up with MAVS in the Irf3 pathways-> cause activation of type I INF

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11
Q

What in INFB?

A

small soluble protein-produced by infected cell and signal to itself and neighbours (paracrine and autocrine_

Tells cells via IFNAR receptor -> cause upregulation of interferon stimulated genes-> can be several 100s and are toxic (not produced normally-need to activate only in danger)

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12
Q

How dangerous would it be to not have an INF system?

A

Pretty much-if not have it ur dead to viral infection, even very mild ones

Child with monogenic inborn in IRF-7 gene-> couldnt fight off flu and had to get through hospital (and still did pretty poorly)
Other person with vaccine (MMR-attenuated) -> got infected with mini-measle -> succubs from vaccines. Mutation in IFNAR2 (1 part of the INF receptors)
Patient mutation with IRF3-Herpes simplex virus (cold sore)-> doing very bad (because of complication-Herpes simplex encephilitis–with no INF working, herpes replicate in CNS)

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13
Q

How doe INFNAR receptors signal downstream and to what>

A

INFNAR is dimer
Signallin unfoves JCK and STAT phospho and dimerisation-> STAT acts as TF for hundrends on genes, like PKR (inhbits translation), MHC, 2’5’OAS (activate RNAse L that destroys RNA). Mx (inhbits incoming viral genome), ADAR (induce error in viral replication), Serpine (activate proteases), Viperin (inhbits viral budding)
IFITM3- sits in endosome and stop from viral fusing with the membrane to enter the cell (mutations cause more severe influenza)

All these are effective against viruses, but very toxic to your own cell-> stop translation, cut all mRNA, proteases, etc -> needs to be activated very transiently

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14
Q

What are Mx1/2 and how do they help prevent viral infection?

A

Interferon activated genes
Mx1-binds influenza and stops it from entering the cell/membrane
Mx2-similar but works with HIV

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15
Q

How do interfon response selfregulates to reduce damage?

A

SOCS-supressors of cytokine signalling-also interferon activated
Will activate at the same time -> downregulate after a while (no detail lol)

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16
Q

What are strategies viruses uses to evade INF response?

A

Hide PAMPs
Interfere with host cell gene expression with proteins
Some viruses target the INF induction cascade
Some target the protein in INF signallin (like STAT)
Some block individual INF induced enzymes
some activate SOCS early and downregulate INF
And some just replicate too fast or in the wrong place and dont care about INF

17
Q

3 Exemples of viruses that can evade INF

A

hepA-codes for proteases that are important to cleave its own proteases, but also can cut MAVS-can produce Irf3-no INFb

Influenza-Interferon Antagonist-NS1-stops the RIG pathway-blocks detection, and stops transcription in nucleus

POX viruses/herpes viruses are so large that they have many acessory genes (DNA viruses)
Pox-soluble cytokine receptors-binds INF-and mops up any INF going to neighbours (therapeutically interesting because INF tend to get out of hand (like RA))

Ebola-encode Vp35 and 30 that hides it from the cell. Vp24 blocks signalling in neighbouring cells

18
Q

What are the consequences on the body of INF response?

A

Combination of cytokines and viral damage can cause large damage-all the fever, fatigue, etc are usually causes by cytokines-why feel sicj

also viruses interfere with this-can cause you to produce too much of the same thing, as they interfere with everything -> can lead to cytokine storms, usually in severe influenza, dengue fever, ebola
The storm causes way more damage than the viruses could of done
typical bad: TNF, INFa/bm IL6
cause leaky endothelium, inflam response, and even pulmonary fibrosis (innapropriate repair)

19
Q

Can INF be used as an antiviral treatment?

A

Sounds like a good idea-
But INF also causes all the unpleasant effects of illness -> make you feel like flu immediatly
Has been used againt HCV, but not we have better ones

Considering using InfLambda-> because receptors only in certain epithial cells -> can protect epithelial against viruses but wont spread and create massive cytokine response

20
Q

What has INF studies revealed about new vaccine techniques?

A

Viruses with defiecient INF control cannot win their battle
Can make live attenuated vaccine -> target their gene specificly
But then they can grow in cells to produce vaccines-so need to also makes cells that can produce INF response

21
Q

What is the relation bwteen INF and cancer?

A

Cancerous cells cannot make INF-and viruses can kill them a lot more easily
So cancer therapy based on viruses? Destroy only those vulnerable cells