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IMMUNOLOGICAL TOLERANCE. Lecture 6. Jan Żeromski 2007/2008. BASIC FACTS ABOUT TOLERANCE. Tolerance – a state of unresponsiveness specific for a given antigen It is specific (negative) immune response It is induced by prior exposure to that antigen. BASIC FACTS ABOUT TOLERANCE-2.
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IMMUNOLOGICAL TOLERANCE Lecture 6 Jan Żeromski 2007/2008
BASIC FACTS ABOUT TOLERANCE • Tolerance – a state of unresponsiveness specific for a given antigen • It is specific (negative) immune response • It is induced by prior exposure to that antigen
BASIC FACTS ABOUT TOLERANCE-2 • Self tolerance – prevents the body to elicit an immune attack against its own tissues • Mechanisms of active tolerance prevent inflammatory reactions to many innocuous airborne and food antigens found at mucosal surfaces
Featuresof self-tolerance • Self-non-self discrimination is learned during development • Tolerance is NOT genetically programmed • The time of first encounter is critical in determining responsiveness
FACTORS IMPORTANT IN THE INDUCTION OF TOLERANCE • The stage of differentiation of lymphocytes at the time of antigen confrontation • The site of encounter • The nature of cells presenting antigenic epitopes • The number of lymphocytes able to respond • Microenvironment of encounter (expression of cell adhesion molecules, influence of cytokines etc.)
TOLERANCE – GENERAL PROPERTIES • Immature or developing lymphocyte is more susceptible to tolerance induction than mature one • Tolerance to foreign antigens is induced even in mature lymphocytes under special conditions • Tolerance of T lymphocytes is a particularly effective for maintaining long-lived unresponsiveness to self antigens
POSSIBLE WAYS OF PREVENTION OF SELF-REACTIVITY • Clonal deletion – physical elimination of cells from the repertoire during their lifespan • Clonal anergy – downregulating the intrinsic mechanism of the immune response such as lack of costimulatory molecules or insufficient second signal for cell activation • Suppression – inhibition of cellular activation by interaction with other cells: (Treg – CD4+, CD25+ T lymphocytes)
Central The site for T cells is the thymus The site for B cells is the bone marrow The mechanism – clonal deletion Peripheral The site – everywhere in the body Cells – both T and B Mechanisms – anergy, cell death, immune deviation DIVISION OF TOLERANCE
IMPORTANT OPPOSED TERMS • Central tolerance (self-tolerance) versus peripheral tolerance • Active tolerance vs. passive tolerance (ignorance) • T-cell tolerance vs. B-cell tolerance • Natural vs. artificial tolerance • Complete vs. incomplete tolerance
IMMUNOLOGICALLY PRIVILEGED SITES • Sites in the body where foreign antigens or tissue grafts do not elicit immune responses • These antigens do interact with T cells, but instead of destructive IR they induce tolerance or a response innocent to the tissue
IMMUNOLOGICALLY PRIVILEGED SITES - 2 • Immunosuppressive cytokines such as TGF-beta seem to be resposible for such unusual response • The sites include: brain, eye, testis, uterus (fetus)
IMPORTANT OPPOSED TERMS • Central tolerance (self-tolerance) versus peripheral tolerance • Active tolerance vs. passive tolerance (ignorance) • T-cell tolerance vs. B-cell tolerance • Natural vs. artificial tolerance
IGNORANCE OF SELF ANTIGENS • It is a passive form of immunological tolerance • It occurs when: • T cells can not contact with self – antigens, • if self antigen is present in too low an amount to be detected, • if it is present on cells with few or no MHC molecules • if there are not enough T cells to respond • if there is the absence of co-stimulation
FEATURES OF B-CELL TOLERANCE • Binding soluble self antigens is tolerogenic for B cells • Immature B cells that encounter self antigen undergo clonal abortion • The fate of self-reactive B cells depends on the affinity of the B cell antigen receptor and the nature of the antigen • Receptor editing - autoreactive B cells escape anergy or deletion by further rearranging their immunoglobulin genes
IMPORTANT OPPOSED TERMS • Central tolerance (self-tolerance) versus peripheral tolerance • Active tolerance vs. passive tolerance (ignorance) • T-cell tolerance vs. B-cell tolerance • Natural vs. artificial tolerance
ARTIFICIAL INDUCTION OF TOLERANCE • By chimerism in immunocompromized hosts • By antibodies to T cell receptors • By injection of soluble antigens
ARTIFICIAL INDUCTION OF TOLERANCE - 2 4. By oral administration of antigens 5. By clonal exhaustion via extensive clonal proliferation after repeated antigenic challenge 6. Anti-idiotypic antibody – partial result, affects B cells only
FUTURE APPLICATIONS OF TOLERANCE • To promote tolerance to foreign tissue grafts • To control the damaging immune responses in hypersensitivity states and autoimmune diseases