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Allografts, Autoimmune Diseases and Amyloidosis. Normal immune response. Protection against infectious disease Innate immunity epithelial barriers phagocytic neutrophils and macrophages natural killer (NK) cells plasma proteins (complement, clotting, kinin)
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Normal immune response • Protection against infectious disease • Innate immunity • epithelial barriers • phagocytic neutrophils and macrophages • natural killer (NK) cells • plasma proteins (complement, clotting, kinin) • Adaptive immunity— “the immune response” • cellular • B-cells and plasma cells • helper (Th) and cytotoxic (CTL) T-cells • humoral • antibodies • cytokines
Pattern recognition receptors • DCs and macrophages respond to pathogen-associated and damage-associated molecular motifs • Toll-Like Receptors (10 in human) • membrane receptors on outer plasma membrane and vessicles • TLR2 for Gram positives, TLR3 for fungi, TLR4 for Gram negatives, TLR9 for viral and bacterial DNA (CpG) • NLRs (NOD-like receptors) (at least 20) • Cytosolic proteins bind a variety of microbial products • NLRC-type have caspase activation domain • NLRP-type have pyrin domain • Both classes of receptors activate caspases and NF-kB • Affect gene expression via NF-kB and MAP kinase cascades • Release IL-1 and other proinflammatory cytokines
Lymphocytes and Receptors • 70% Tcells—TCRs recognize MHC-Ag complexes • CTLs express TCR a b dimer complexed with z, CD3 and CD8 • Ag must be bound to Class 1 MHC; universally expressed • HLA-A, HLA-B, HLA-C a heterodimer with b2 microglobulin • Ag is peptide processed in cytoplasm by proteasome from intracellular microbe (B,V) or tumor-associated protein • Th cells express TCR a b dimer complexed with z, CD3 and CD4 • Ag must be bound to Class 2 MHC; restricted to DC, MF, B-cells • HLA-DP, HLA-DQ, HLA-DR a–b dimer • Ag is lysozome-processed peptide from extracellular microbe (B,E) • 20% Bcells—surface IgM or IgD recognize soluble Ag • complexes with Iga, Igb • 10% NK cells—inhibitory receptors recognize MHC1-Ag complex; activating receptor must also bind ligand • NKG2-CD94 heterodimer binds HLA-E, which is highly conserved • KIRs (killer-cell immuglobulin-like receptor) bind HLA-A, -B or –C, which are polymorphic
Lymphocyte receptors One receptor per cell Expression from one cmsm Sommatic rearrangement Several to hundreds of segments (VDJC) per locus Two rearranged gene loci TCRs are a-b or g-d 1 dimer per receptor BCRs (Ig) are H-L 2, 4, or 10 dimers per functional unit Millions of receptors within each individual MHC(human leukocyte antigen) Many receptors per cell Expression from both cmsm No rearrangement Tens to hundreds of alleles per locus Three primary class Ia a chains all dimerize with same b2-microglobulin Class Ia HLA-A, -B, -C Class Ib HLA-E, -F, -G, -H Six primary class II a-b dimers HLA-DP, -DQ, -DR Thousands of receptor combinations throughout the population Ag receptor diversity
Hypersensitivity Reactions • Initial exposure to antigen results in sensitivity • Repeat exposure may result in pathologic hypersensitivity • Both exogenous and endogenous antigens may elicit hypersensitivity • Hypersensitivity is an imbalance between control and activation of effector lymphocytes • Development of hypersensitivity is often associated with the inheritance of particular susceptibility gene (HLA or linked to HLA)
Types of hypersensitivity reactions • Type I — immediate (allergies, anaphylaxis) • immunologic reaction occurs within minutes of antigen binding to antibody bound to mast cells in individuals with prior sensitization • Type II — Ab reaction to bound Ag • caused by antibodies that react with antigens present on cell surfaces or in the extracellular matrix • Type III — Ab complex with circulating Ag • antigen-antibody complexes deposited on vessel walls cause inflammation and tissue damage • Type IV — delayed-type • initiated by antigen-activated (sensitized) T cells
Type IV hypersensitivity • Initiated by antigen-activated (sensitized) T cells • Delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) • CD4+ Th1 cell cytokines stimulate inflammation and recruit macrophages • induced by environmental and self-antigens • Direct cell cytotoxicity • CD8+ CTLs cause tissue damage • frequently follow viral infections • Many autoimmune diseases are type IV hypersensitivities
Allograft rejection and self restriction • Solid organ transplant tissue typing is limited to HLA-A, -B, -DR, more recently also -DQ • Rejection requires recognition of Ag-MHC complex by host Tcells • Genuine CTL reactivity to HLA-C • Genuine Th reactivity to HLA-DQ, -DP • Cross reactivity to similar alleles • Molecular mimicry of pathogen to host-MHC—graft-Ag complex may provide initial sensitization • Limitations of methods for tissue typing • Serological methods limited to Ab availability • PCR-SSP limited to known sequence specificity • Mixed Lymphocyte Reaction takes days (live donor)
Common transplants • Blood transfusions • To temporarily restore blood volume • Kidney • Living donors can be used because they have two kidneys and can get along with only one • Lungs • Usually transplanted along with a heart--attempts have been made with portions of lungs from living donors • Liver • For irreversible liver failure (e.g., from toxins, hepatitis B infection); occasionally taken from living donor • Heart • For patients with failing hearts often because of inherited defects • Pancreas • For Type 1 diabetes mellitus • Skin • For burns; usually taken from elsewhere on the patient's own body • Cornea • To restore sight; taken from cadavers • Bone marrow • To repopulate hematopoietic stem cells after cancer treatment or SCIDS
Graft rejection • Hyperacute • Preformed Ab cross react with graft HLA—instant complement activation, thrombosis, ischemia • Acute—DTH • Cellular rejection • Delayed-type hypersensitivity mediated by T-cells that recognize graft MHC • Vascular rejection • Th-cell stimulated Ab secretion damages graft vascuature • Chronic • Arteriosclerosis stimulated by growth factors released by Th cells and macrophages • Graft vs. Host disease—hematopoietic transplant • Donor T-cells recognize recipient MHC and attack • Uncommonly possible with liver transplant
Immune Tolerance • Specific non-reactivity resulting from previous exposure to an antigen • Active antigen-dependent process • Tcell tolerance more enduring than Bcell • Tolerance may be induced to non-self Ag • Tolerance should develop naturally to self • Central tolerance during maturation • Peripheral tolerance neutralizes “escapees”
Induction of tolerance to non-self • Important for natural development of tolerance or ignorance of proteins from environmental and commensal sources • Allergy shots! • Increasing amounts of foreign Ag administered s.c. or orally (not in US) • Strategy is to promote Th1 and Treg responses to prevent class-switching in newly sensitized Bcells from IgG to IgE
Central self tolerance • Bone marrow • Self-reactive BCRs deleted or rearranged again • Pro-Tcells migrate to thymus • Thymus • Autologous Ag expression induced in thymic epithelium • Self-reactive clones deleted
Peripheral self tolerance • Anergy (lack of activity) • Failure of coreceptor engagement prevents activation • TCR coreceptors CD28—CD80 or 86 (aka B7) • BCR coreceptor CD21 or CD40 • Supression • Treg (formerly supressor Tcells) secrete factors that down-regulate activity; IL-10, TGFb • Activation-induced apoptosis • Fas on Tcells binds FasL on APC along with TCR-MHC and coreceptor-ligand interactions • Death receptor activation of caspase-8, apoptosis
Immune disorders • Allergies and atopy • Atopic individuals express much more IgE than normal • Th2 skew promotes class-switch to IgE • System is primed to respond quickly to very small amounts of allergen • Severe hyperresponsiveness leads to anaphylaxis and shock • Autoimmune disorders • Imbalance between control and activation of effector lymphocytes
Features of autoimmune diseases • Persistence and progression • epitope spreading from tissue damage • release self-antigens and exposure of epitopes normally concealed from the immune system • tolerance not developed against hidden epitopes • Th1 responses cause destructive macrophage-rich inflammation and antibodies that activate complement and bind Fc receptors • Th17 responses dominated by neutrophils and monocytes
Systemic autoimmune diseases • Systemic Lupus Erythmatosis (SLE) • Type III immune complexes to soluble self Ag • Rheumatoid arthritis • Type III immune complexes in synovial fluid also DTH with fibrinoid necrosis and erosion • Seronegative spondyloarthropathies • DTH against ligaments • Sjogren syndrome • DTH against lacrimal and salivary glands • Scleroderma • DTH against ECM or smooth muscle
Systemic Lupus Erythmatosis (SLE) • Antinuclear antibodies (ANAs) dsDNA • histones • nonhistone proteins bound to RNA (RNPs) • Smith antigen • nucleolar antigens • Centromeres, topoisomerase • Blood cell-directed antibodies • red cells, platelets, lymphocytes • Antiphospholipid antibodies • Directed to phospholipid-bound serum proteins • Prothrombin, annexin V, protein S, protein C • Hypercoagulability results
Rheumatoid arthritis • Chronic inflammation affecting mainly small joints • Caused by unknown self antigen(s) • DTH T-cell reaction with production of cytokines that activate phagocytes that damage tissues and stimulate proliferation of synovial cells (synovitis) • TNF antagonists are of great benefit • Antibodies (rheumatoid factors) contribute to the disease—Type III hypersensitivity
Figure 5-23 Rheumatoid arthritis. A, A joint lesion. B, Low magnification reveals marked synovial hypertrophy with formation of villi. C, At higher magnification, dense lymphoid aggregates are seen in the synovium.
Sjogren syndrome Sjögren syndrome affects primarily the salivary and lacrimal glands, causing dryness of the mouth and eyes.The disease is believed to be caused by an autoimmune T-cell reaction against an unknown self antigen(s) expressed in these glands, or immune reactions against the antigens of a virus that infects the tissues.
Systemic sclerosis (scleroderma) • Cutaneous involvement (scleroderma) is presenting symptom appearing in ~95% of cases • Visceral involvement of the GI tract, lungs, kidneys, heart, and skeletal muscles (systemic sclerosis) produces the major morbidity and mortality • Diffuse scleroderma progresses to viscera rapidly • Limited scleroderma often confined to fingers and face • Involvement of the viscera occurs late • Also called CREST syndrome • calcinosis, Raynaud phenomenon, esophageal dysmotility, sclerodactyly, and telangiectasia
Immune deficiency diseases • Primary immunodeficiencies • Genetic defect affecting a primary component of humoral or cellular immunity • X-Linked agammaglobulinemia (Bruton's agammaglobulinemia) • Isolated IgA Deficiency • Hyper-IgM Syndrome • DiGeorge Syndrome (Thymic Hypoplasia) • Severe Combined Immunodeficiency (SCID) • Immunodeficiency with Thrombocytopenia and Eczema (Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome) • Genetic Deficiencies of the Complement System • Secondary immunodeficiencies • Sequelae to infection, cancer, other diseases • AIDS
AIDS and HIV • Properties of HIV • nontransforming human retrovirus • lentivirus family • HIV-1 associated with AIDS in the US, Europe, and Central Africa • HIV-2 principally in West Africa and India • Structure of HIV • spherical with electron-dense, cone-shaped core • major capsid protein p24 • nucleocapsid protein p7/p9 • two copies of genomic RNA (gag,pol,env,tat,rev,vif,nef,vpr,vpu) • three viral enzymes (protease, reverse transcriptase, and integrase) • lipid envelope derived from the host cell membrane
HIV Infection and AIDS • Infection targets and destroys CD4+ Tcells • surface gp120 binds CD4 molecules and changes conformation • CD4-bound gp120 binds coreceptor CCR5 (on Th, DC, mf) or CXCR4 (on Th), altering shape again, exposure of gp41 peptide • hydrophobic peptide of gp41 inserts into target cell membrane resulting in fusion • HIV genome enters the cytoplasm of the cell integrating into nuclear genome during replication
Progression • Acute phase (weeks) • Mucosal memory T cells infected via CCR5 • Symptoms of viral infection • Steady-state viremia (set-point viral load) • Chronic phase (years) • Dissemination of virus to Th via DC in lympoid tissues • Replication and destruction of T cells in lymph nodes • Gradual inversion of CD4-CD8 balance • Crisis phase (months) • Viremia, fever, fatigue, secondary infections of Euk pathogens (fungi, helminths, protozoa) • Viral tumors develop in absence of effective Tcell defense
Amyloidosis • Deposition of proteinaceous aggregates in extracellular spaces • Nonbranching protein b-pleated sheet fibrils that bundle into fibers • Associated proteoglycan and glycosaminoglycan units (P component) bind dyes like starch • 23 different proteins have been identified in amyloid deposits
Accumulations • Some accumulation of misfolded proteins is normal • Normal accumulations cleared by mf • Amyloid deposits not cleared due to defect in mf enzymes • Protein mutations could result in greater tendency to misfold • Protein mutations could result in resistance to proteases
Amyloid differs from collagen • Lack of cellularity in amyloid hyaline areas relative to collagen-rich areas • Appears less fibrous than collagen under low power • Stains macroscopically with iodine and acid (like starch) • Stains microscopically with Congo red • Congo red staining of amyloid demonstrates apple-green birefringence under polarized light
Clinical features and symptoms • Renal involvement • proteinuria leading to the nephrotic syndrome • Cardiac amyloidosis • insidious congestive heart failure • conduction disturbances and arrhythmias • Gastrointestinal amyloidosis • asymptomatic; or malabsorption, diarrhea, and disturbances in digestion