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Immune Response against Infectious Diseases. Department of Immunology. IMMU 7070-Introductory Immunology 2010-2011. Dr. Nyla Dil 437 Apotex Centre 272-3149. Oct 20, 2011. Objectives. To understand how the immune system performs its major physiologic function.
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Immune Response against Infectious Diseases Department of Immunology IMMU 7070-Introductory Immunology 2010-2011 Dr. Nyla Dil 437 Apotex Centre 272-3149 Oct 20, 2011
Objectives • To understand how the immune system performs its major physiologic function. • To illustrate the physiologic relevance of various aspects of immune system function to different types of pathogenic microorganisms and how microbes try to resist the mechanisms of host defence.
Outline • General Features of Immune Response to pathogenic microorganisms • Immune response to: -Viruses -Extracellular Bacteria -Intracellular Bacteria
Immune System • The principal function of the immune system is to protect the host against pathogenic microbes. • Immunity may be innate or specific.
Pathogens & Disease • Pathogens are defined as microbes capable of causing host damage. • When host damage reaches a certain threshold, it can manifest itself as a disease.
Pathogenesis of Infectious Diseases Development of an infectious disease in an individual involves complex interactions between the microbe and the host. Key events during infection include: • Entry of the microbe • Invasion and colonization of host tissues • Evasion of host immunity • Tissue injury or functional impairment
Important General Features of Immunity to Pathogens • Defense against pathogens is mediated by both innate and specific immunity. • The innate immune response to pathogens plays an important role in determining the nature of the specific immune response. • The immune response is capable of responding in distinct and specialized ways to different pathogens in order to combat these infectious agents most effectively
Important General Features of Immunity to Pathogens • The survival and pathogenicity of pathogens in a host are critically influenced by their ability to evade or resist effector mechanisms of protective immunity. • Tissue injury and disease consequent to infections may be caused by the host response to the pathogen and its products rather than the pathogen itself.
Immunity To Viruses • Obligatory intercellular pathogens that replicate within cells. • Use the nucleic acid and protein synthesis machineries of the host cell. • Infect a variety of cell populations by utilizing normal cell surface molecules as receptors to enter cell.
Innate Immunity To Viruses • The principal mechanisms of innate immunity against viruses are : -Inhibition of infection by type I IFNs -NK cell-mediated killing of infected cells.
Adaptive Immunity To Viruses • Adaptive immunity against viral infections is mediated by: - Antibodies: block virus binding and entry into host cells - CTLs: eliminate the infection by killing infected cells
Immunity To Extracellular Bacteria • Extracellular bacteria are capable of replicating outside host cells. • They cause disease by two principal mechanisms: • They induce inflammation, which results in tissue destruction at the site of infection. • Many of these bacteria produce toxins: - Endotoxins - Exotoxins • The immune responses against extracellular bacteria are aimed at eliminating the bacteria and at neutralizing the effects of their toxins.
Innate Immunity To Extracellular Bacteria • The principal mechanisms of innate immunity to extracellular bacteria are: -Complement activation -Phagocytosis -Inflammatory response
Innate Immunity To Extracellular Bacteria • Complement activation leads to opsonization and enhanced phagocytosis of bacteria • Complement by-products stimulate inflammatory response by recruiting and activating leukocytes • Phagocytes use surface receptors (mannose receptors,scavenger receptors), to recognize extracellular bacteria. • Phagocytes use Fc receptors and complement receptors to recognize opsonized bacteria.
Innate Immunity To Extracellular Bacteria • TLRs participate in the activation of the phagocytes as a result of encounter with microbes. • These various receptors promote the phagocytosis of the microbes and stimulate the microbicidal activities of the phagocytes. • Activated phagocytes secrete cytokines, which induce leukocyte infiltration into sites of infection (inflammation). • Injury to normal tissue is a pathologic effect of inflammation.
Adaptive Immunity To Extracellular Bacteria • Humoral immunity is the principal protective immune response against extracellular bacteria: Functions to block infection, eliminate the microbes, neutralize toxins • Adaptive immune responses to EC microbes consists of : -Antibody production -Activation of CD4+ helper T cells
Immunity To Intracellular Bacteria • Intracellular bacteria survive and even replicate within phagocytes. • These microbes are able to find a niche where they are inaccessible to circulating antibodies. • Their elimination requires the mechanisms of cell-mediated immunity
Innate Immunity To Intracellular Bacteria • The innate immune response to intracellular bacteria is mainly mediated by: -Phagocytes -Natural Killer (NK) cells
Innate Immunity To Intracellular Bacteria • Mice with severe combined immuno deficiency, which lack T and B cells, are able to transiently control infection with the intracellular bacterium Listeriamonocytogenes by NK cell-derived IFN-γ production. However, innate immunity usually fails to eradicate these infections, and eradication requires adaptive cell-mediated immunity.
Adaptive Immunity To Intracellular Bacteria The major protective immune response against intracellular bacteria is T cell-mediated immunity.
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