Type4Immunopath2 Flashcards

1
Q

Define Type IV immunopathology

A

T cell-mediated events that are undesirable or injurious
○ Only type of immunopathology not requiring antibodies or B cells

○ Was known as: delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) → No mas!

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2
Q

Some examples where Type IV represents all or most of the mechanism:

A

○ Rejection of allografts 

○ Graft-vs.-host disease (GvHD) - the reverse of allograft rejection

○ A positive tuberculin skin test

○ Resistance to Mycobacterium tuberculosis 
○ Resistance to fungal infections 

○ Contact dermatitis, e.g., poison ivy

○ Chronic beryllium disease 

○ Many autoimmune diseases, e.g. multiple sclerosis

○ Tumor immunity

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3
Q

Tuberculin skin test aka “Mantoux skin test” 
- what happens if you have Ab to TB?

A

Inject 0.1mL of purified protein derivative (PPD), aka a std prep of M. tuberculosis antigens, intradermally→ see skin “bubble” → local macrophages or dendritic cells take up antigen → present on MHC Class II

you have expanded number of anti-tuberculosis Th1 memory cells → Th1 memory cells get stimulated → produce IFN-γ → attract M1 macrophages → after 48 hours, you see red/raised induration

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4
Q

Characterize the cells that would be seen in a 48-hour biopsy of the TB test site with regard to whether T cells or macrophages predominate.

A

You see a cellular infiltrate, not Th1.

○ Remember that one Th1 can attract 1000 macrophages? Yea …macrophages win.

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5
Q

Explain why a person usually has no observed symptoms when first exposed to poison ivy.

A

Thanx to our Immunization phase of immune response! (initiation phase)

□ Skin first gets exposed to oil of Toxicodendronradicans→ oil contains urushiol→ penetrate skin and binds to MHC (or binding peptides that eventually get presented on MHC) → dendritic cell w/ MHC goes to lymph node → presents MHC + antigen to Th0 precursors → develop into Th1 and Th17 → divide and voila! you are immunized and ready to respond . . . Next time

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6
Q

Discuss how a chemical or small peptide might not need to be processed through an antigen presenting cell to be presented by that cell to T cells.

A

• Chemicals or Small peptides can associated directly with MHC type II without having to be processed

○ If then mixed with pt’s T cells → target cell death in hours

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7
Q

Abacavir

A

nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor for HIV treatment

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8
Q

Describe the problem that HLA-B*5701 people may have with the HIV drug abacavir

A
8% of people given abacavir develop abacavir hypersensitivity syndrome 

○ Most people with this syndrome have HLA-B*5701 allele 
-HLA-B*5701 allele is class I and works through CTLs → drug induced autoimmune rxn! 
- Abacavir can bind to HLA-B57 and induce a conformational change
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9
Q

Discuss in principle how T cell immunity could be measured in the laboratory.

A

T CELL-MEDIATED IMMUNITY IN VITRO 
• Whole blood or isolated WBCs (as long as it has T cells AND APCs) are incubated with antigen in cell culture → observe for: 

○ Proliferation: Count cell numbers

○ Activation (“blast transformation”): Look at cell size

○ DNA synthesis 

○ Cytokines released

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10
Q

Differentiate between a first-set and second-set graft rejection.

A

First-set reaction: 

• Skin graft from mouse strain A is inserted into mouse strain M → rejected in 10-20 days

• Recipient (M mouse) has differing MHC to A mouse. So recipient’s response to mouse A histocompatability antigens become boosted → develops more anti-A Th1 and CTL 



Second-set reaction:

• Another A skin graft is placed on same M recipient → rejected in 5-10 days (faster the second time around!)

• Secondary response results from T cell memory developed during first exposure (anti-A Th1 and CTL)

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11
Q

hyperacute rejection 
- example

A

“White graft” reaction: 
Hyperacute rejection → due to preexisting Ab

• If you keep putting A grafts onto B, eventually they will rejected even before they heal, that is, they stay white and bloodless. 

○ This is due to the development of antibodies to histocompatibility antigens.

• Common when xenografts (from another species) are attempted. 

○ Due to human pre-existing antibodies to ubiquitous

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12
Q

What are Autoimmune conditions?

A

T cells are involved in the pathogenesis.

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13
Q

Discuss how autoimmunity can result from environmental exposure to tissues that cross-react with human organs.

A

If there is an antigen that is similar enough to a self-protein, exposure to the foreign antigen could create an immune response that ends up targeting self-protein as well

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14
Q

three requirements for graft-versus-host disease to occur.

A
  1. The graft must contain immunocompetent T cells (even bone marrow has mature T cells in it).
    
2. There must be at least one antigen in the host which the graft’s T cells can recognize 
- No worries with identical twins.
    
3. The host must be relatively immunoincompetent or unable for genetic reasons to recognize the graft’s MHC antigens, otherwise the graft would be rejected too rapidly.
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15
Q

graft-versus-leukemia phenomenon.

A

In leukemia, you are immunodeficient.
So get this: Graft vs Tumor (GVT) or “graft-vs leukemia” phenomenon:
• If Leukemia stopped responding to conventional therapy → give large drug doses or radiation (destroys bone marrow)→ then transplant marrow from best match allogenic donor → Graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) phenomenon 
- Graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) phenomenon: Can see decreased relapse rate of leukemia after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation.

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