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Chapter 10 Dynamics of Adaptive Immunity. This chapter tries to integrate much of what we have already covered so we can better understand how the immune system protects from infection. How infectious agents cause disease The course of an adaptive immune response Immunological memory.
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Chapter 10 Dynamics of Adaptive Immunity This chapter tries to integrate much of what we have already covered so we can better understand how the immune system protects from infection. • How infectious agents cause disease • The course of an adaptive immune response • Immunological memory
The course of a typical infection and adaptive immune responses can be divided into phases If no innate immunity
The establishment of an infection depends on several factors: • Characteristics of the microorganism • Number of organisms • Mode of transmission (how and where they contact the host) • Stability of the organism (in and outside of the host)
Almost all infections begin at an epithelial surface* Skin and tight junctions usually prevent penetration *skin or mucosal surface of the respiratory, gastrointestinal, and urogenital tract which are always exposed to microorganisms.Interstitial tissues are normally free of any microorganisms (sterile)
Most pathogens have developed defenses to partially escape destruction by the innate protective mechanisms listed in boxes 1 & 2 below Most pathogens cause disease in only one or a few related species because the pathogens can adhere to epithelial surfaces of only a few species or can escape innate immunity of only a few species.
The course of the adaptive response to infection How do infections progress in immune deficient individuals? Adaptive immune response becomes important when innate immunity cannot deal with the infection within a couple of day
The results of an immune response vary depending on the individual and the pathogen and other factors (e.g, level of care). • After a primary immune response, usually there are no pathogens remaining. • Sometimes the infection is contained but not elimintated (TB granuloma, herpes virus becomes latent, HIV mutates). • Sometimes the pathogen or the immune response, or both, leave significant tissue damage (e.g., scaring, blindness). • Often life-long immunity
NK1.1 T cell is a T cell sub-set which expresses a surface molecule usually associated with NK cells and do not express normal TCR repertoire NK cell TH1 TH2 What governs whether a TH0 cell differentiates into TH1 or TH2? Pathogens influence cytokines that affect TH0 differentiation into TH1 or TH2
T cell subsets produce cytokines that regulate development of other subsets For example, TH1 inhibits TH2 and TH2 inhibits TH1. Thus most responses are dominated by either TH1 or TH2 and are not balanced responses
Cytokines influence the CD4 T cell subset development and this can be crucial for development of an appropriate immune response Mice normally respond inappropriately to Leishmania and thus are killed by the parasite
Effector T cells change their adhesion molecules so they can migrate to the site of an infection. That is, adhesion molecules regulate trafficking
CD4+ T cells can license dendritic cells to activate CD8+ T cells (CTLs) (figure 8.28) but some CD8+ cells can be activated by dendritic cell in the absence of CD4+ T cells CD8 T cells can be induced to secrete INF-g in an antigen non-specific way
Peripheral lymphoid organs are the site of antigen-specific B cell activation [antigen binding (signal 1) and T cell help (signal 2)] The book is inconsistent on the location of the primary focus
Protective immunity is the resistance to a pathogen that results from infection or vaccination. It is due to an adaptive immune response which induced immunological memory of the pathogen. Usually, there are few or no symptoms associated with a infection when it is dealt with by protective immunity Protective immunity consists of preformed immune components and immunological memory
No increase in specificity Immunological Memory(maintenance of memory is probably antigen-independent but there is evidence for antigen sequestration or re-exposure to maintain memory) Primary Vs. Secondary B Cell Responses High quality
Primary Vs. Secondary Vs. Tertiary B Cell Responses High quantity High quality
Affinity maturation Affinity maturation is a form of somatic selection (somatic evolution) where B cells, using their surface antibodies (BCRs), compete for limiting amounts of antigen. The B cell must compete with each other and with free antibody produced by plasma cells or plasmablasts. Only those B cells with the highest binding affinity will be able to bind to antigen and thus remain activated.
Some Characteristics of Memory B cells Long-lived Memory B cells have high affinity antibody and high levels of MHC so they are efficient at acquiring antigens (signal 1) and ready to get T help (signal 2) Memory B cells have B7 on their surface so, maybe, they can activate or participate in activation of TH2 (memory) cells Memory B cell have usually switch class from IgM so they usually have other Ig isotypes on their surface (mostly IgG)
Memory T cells remain long after the virus infection is under control* or the virus are gone * The case shown here is the reactivation of a letent infection
Naïve and memory T cell have different requirements for survival Naïve T cell require contact with MHC+self peptides for survival (like positive selection in the thymus)(too weak to activate the T cell) Weak binding Antigen encounter (signal 1) plus co-stimulation (signal 2) activates the T cell (proliferation and differentiation) Strong binding Memory cells can come directly from the activated naïve cells or from the effector cells Some differentiate into effector cells Strong binding Memory cells need cytokines but not contact with MHC+peptide for survival. This is different from the naïve T cells (top panel) Most effectors die in a few days Memory T cells need MHC+self peptide to proliferate (weak interactions). These remain memory T cells and do not become effectors until they bind the MHC+the correct foreign peptide (strong binding). Weak binding
Death Plasma cell Naïve B cell Memory B cells Effector T cell Death Naïve T cell Memory T cell
We will skip subsets of memory cells (e.g. 10-17 and figure10.25 CD4 T cells are required for CTL (CD8) memory but not for primary CTL response
When antigens have both epitopes that were “seen” before and new epitopes, the memory responses to the epitopes seen before will dominate and there may be no response to the new epitopes Original antigenic sin Epitopes ABCD Epitopes ACEF Epitopes ADEG