Pensum noter Flashcards
Barriers and non-immune antimicrobial defenses
Epithelial cells with tight junctions (skin) cilia, mucus saliva and tears, digestive tract, microbiota. Neutrophils.
Production of anti-microbial proteins = defensins, cathelicidins, histatins. All are activated by proteolysis→ a pro-region is cleaved of for activation and the result is an amphiaphatic antimicrobial peptide
Defensins - disrupts cell membranes of bacteria and fungi, and envelopes of some vira (epithelial and neutrophils) by forming a pore.
Cathelicidins - cationic amphipathic plasmide that disrupts membranes and is toxic to microorganism (Neutrophils)
Histatins - Cationic peptides that are active against fungi and promote rapid wound healing (oral cavity)
Pathogens:
Extracellular - interstitial spaces , blood, lymph (complement, phagocytosis, antibodies, autophagy) and epithelial surfaces (antimicrobial peptides and antibodies)
Intracellular - cytoplasmic (NK cells and cytotoxic T cells), vesicular (T cell and NK cell dependent macrophage activation)
Tissue damage Infection
- Direct damage:
Exotoxin production, endotoxin and direct cytopathic effect - Indirect damage
Immune complexes, anti-host antibody and cell mediated immunity
escape the immune system and non immune system
-Anti-Crispr proteins
-MHC-1 cannot migrate to the surface and therefore cannot present viral peptides to CD8 t cells.
-Escape the phagosome into the cytosol.
-many others
Innate immune system
Macrophage, dendritic cells, Neutrophils, Eosinophils, Basophils, Mast cells, NK cells, Autophagy and Complement system
Macrophages
Tissue residents
- Antigen presentation
- Secretion of cytokines
- Production of complement and macromolecules needed for tissue repair
- Can activate complement
- M1 and M2
Activation
- Cytokines
- Pamps (TLR, NLR)
- Complement receptors (C5a and C3a)
Dendritic cells
-PAPC (presents both MHC class I and II)
- lymphoid organs, blood, tissues
-Macro and pinocytosis
- Capture antigen and bring it to the secondary lymphoid organs where an immune response is initiated
Activation
- By pamps and cytokines
Types of dendritic cells
Conventional dendritic cells
- Circulates peripheral tissue
- Binds antigen and migrate to secondary lymphoid organs
- PAPC most potent stimulators of T-cell response
Plasmacytoid dendritic cells
- Can also act as antigen presenters
- Main function during inflammatory response is the production of antiviral interferons
Follicular dendritic cells
- present antigens to B-cells
- Reside in lymphoid follicles
- recognizes BAFF and APRIL, promote B-cell survival and proliferation
Cross presentation
presentation of exogenous antigens on MHC class I molecules, known as cross-presentation, is essential for the initiation of CD8(+) T cell responses.
There will however occur a leak of MHC class II, in the vacuolar pathway.
Neutrophils
-Phagocytosis and killing of ingested microorganisms
-Phagosome fuses with granules to destroy internalized bacteria= oxygen dependent respiratory burst
-First to arrive at the crime scene
-NOT APC’s
Activation
Activated by cytokines for recruitment to the site of inflammation. Rolls over endothelial cells and via various ligands and receptors gets into the infected site. (vasodialation slows down the bloodflow, so the neutrophil has time to make proper contact)
Oxidative burst
Rapid release of reactive oxidative species
- fMet activates Rac
- RAC assembles NADPH oxidase complex
- NADPH oxidase transfer free electrons to O2, generating superoxidase ions and other free oxygen radicals
- Acidification leads to lysosomal protease activation and formatting of H2O2, killing all microbes.
Eosinophils
- engage both in secretion of pre-formed granule-stored contents, including eosinophil specific toxic proteins, enzymes, cytokines, chemokines, and other bioactive mediators
- Masters of exocytosis
- Killing of antibody-coated parasites
Activation
Can be activated by cross-linking IgG and IgA Fc receptors by agarose beads with IgG, IgA or secretory IgA (being the most potent). Activation by cytokines.
Mast cells
- Release of granules containing histamine and active agents
-Found in tissues not blood
-Express IgE and complement receptors
Activation
Activated by IgE bound to mast cells
Basophils
-Promotion of allergic responses and augmentation of anti-parasitic immunity
-Induce inflammation
-Can function as APC in inducing Th2 response against helminth parasites allergens.
Activation
activated by antigen crosslinking of FceRI receptor-bound IgE to undergo rapid degranulation and release their cellular contents and by inflammatory mediators (complement factors C5a and C3a)
NK-cells
-Releases lytic granules that kill some virus-infected cells and tumor cells
- NK cells are either activated by ITAM or inhibited by ITIM
Activation:
If they do not bind MHC-class 1, they release granules which kill the target cell (important in cancer regulation)
ILC
- promote host defense and contribute to tissue and metabolic homeostasis, wound healing and immune surveillance
- effector cells which lack re-arranged antigen-specific receptors
Autophagy
Happens inside the cell, and is induced by starvation, pathogens (pamps) protein aggregates and ssRNA. Promoted by NOD1 and NOD2 sensors, p62, NDP52, Optn and TLR7.
TLRs are dependent on the classical pathway NOD is not.
- Mechanical stress Inhibit TOR, which inhibits ATG, this induce autophagy.
- ATG6 and class III P13K complex activates ATG
1. ATG16 conjugate system, ATG12,5,16 complex
2. ATG8 conjugate system - ATG induces isolation membrane expansion, in creation of autophagy vacuoles
- Fusion with lysosomes and the degradation of protein
LC3 is a marker for autophagy
Functions in the recycling of intracellular components, host defence and degradation of harmful proteins.
Complement:
- Lectin
Triggered by the PRR, MBL and ficolins - Classical
Triggered when C1q recognizes a microbial surface directly or binds to antibodies - Alternative
Utilizes spontaneous C3 deposition onto microbial surfaces, augmented by properdin and amplification loop for the two other pathways.
All pathways generate C3 convertase, which is cleaved to C3a and C3b. C3a is free and C3b is bound to the microbial surface.
- C3a and C5a recruits phagocytic cells to site of infection and induce inflamation
- Phagocytes with C3b receptors bind and undergo phagocytosis
- All pathogens generate a C5b convertase that leads to formation of C9 molecule membrane attack complex (MAC), which disrupts cell membranes.
C3b → cleavage of C5 to C5a.
Inhibitors and regulation of complement
Factor I → cleaves C3b to iC3b
CR1 and DAF inhibits C3 convertase formation
Factor H → binds to C3b, and thereby inhibits further binding
Cytoplasmic acid sensors
Induce type 1 interferon INF-alpha, beta and w
RIG-1
- Detects viral dsRNA by sensing differences at 5´-capped end (triphosphate)
- Activates CARD to induce production of type 1 interferon
MDA-5
- Detects longer viral dsRNA
- do not need 5´-capping to detect
cGAS
- Binds directly to cytosolic DNA
- Activates STING through cGAMP binding, which stimulates interferon genes
Adaptive immune system
B- and T-cells
T cells
- Resting T-cells: Express CCR7 and reside in T-cell zones
- Activated T-cells: induce CXCR5
- Some T-cells retain EB12 and remain
CD4 function: T helper cells, amplifies and regulates responses to infection, helps b cells in affinity maturation, binds to MHC II.
CD8 function: Cytotoxic T-cells. Kills cells in intracellular infections
T cell maturation
- T-cell progenitor develop in the bone marrow and migrate to the thymus
- Commitment to T-cell lineage happens after Notch signalling, which initiate rearrangement.
Double negative: - Pro-T cell
1. DN1 → enters the thymus
2. DN2 → enter Cortex - Pre-T cell
3. DN3 → VDJ recombination
4. DN4 → tested for MHC affinity
Double positive: VAlpha → Jalpha recombination happens
5. CD4 + CD8
6. TCR
7. Negative selection → high affinity to MHC undergo apoptosis
8. Positive selection → low affinity to MHC survival signal is received
9. Alternative selection → somewhat higher than low affinity to MHC, they become Treg
Single positive:
10. T-cells expressing TCR become CD4 or CD8 depending on THPok or RunX3 and affinity to MHC II or MCH I, interact with macrophage and epithelial cells.
1 and 10 happens in medulla and 2-9 happens in cortex, in the thymus.
Fibroblast reticular cells (FRCs)
- Lymph node stromal cell found in T-cell zone of lymph node cortex
- Creates collagen-rich reticular fibers that guide DCs, T lymphocytes and B lymphocytes
T cell activation
T cells are activated when encountering foreign antigen presented on MHC I or II with the co stimulatory signal from CD28 and B7, combined with an array of different cytokines. It can also happen in a non MHC activating pathway, this is when a t cell is activated by an array of cytokines and an activation by microbes for example TLR and NLR activation.
TCR
T-cell receptor comlex is made up of a variable antigen-recognition proteins and an invariant signaling protein.
- Antigen-binding TCRalphabeta heterodimer is associated with CD3.
Signaling from the T-cell receptor is initiated by ITAMs (10 ITAMs)
Instead of a light and heavy chain, it has an beat and alpha chain
- Always reside in the plasma membrane.
- 1 antigen binding site
Allelic exclusion
Expression of one of two alternative genes of a gene
→ Restricted expression of antigen receptor genes => immunoglobulin and TCR of a single antigen specificity.
MHC I
- Expressed on all nucleated cells
- TCR recognizes MHC
- CD8 binds to the side of the MHC
- Intracellular peptides
MHC class 1 binds to chaperone proteins, and binds to TAP via tapasin
Cytosolic proteins are degraded to peptide fragments by the proteasome
TAP delivers peptides to the ER. This is further cut by ERAAP.
A peptide binds to the MHC class 1 molecule and completes its folding
MHC molecule is released from the TAP complex and exported to the cell membrane
Detective Ribosomal products
- Peptides translated from introns in improperly spliced mRNA, translation of frameshift, improperly folded cytoplasmic proteins and membrane or secreted proteins that fail to enter ER
- Tag with ubiquitin for degradation
- Might help to generate peptide substrates from self-proteins and pathogen proteins for presenting by MHC I