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Inappropriate immune response against self-components

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Presentation on theme: "Inappropriate immune response against self-components"— Presentation transcript:

1 Inappropriate immune response against self-components
Chapter 15 Autoimmunity Inappropriate immune response against self-components

2 The mechanism of self-tolerance
The pre-disposing factors of autoimmune diseases Autoimmune diseases

3 Autoreactive lymphocytes
Humoral imm 胞外 Th1 Th2 Self(Auto) antigen (encoded by the host’s genome) 胞內 CMI: CD8 T CD4 T effectors Immunopathology

4 B/T lymphocytes Development Central lymphoid organs Activation & differentiation Peripheral lymphoid organs Effector function Inflamed sites In healthy individuals the immune system is tolerant of self antigens

5 1. Antigen specificity 2. Diversity 3. Immunological memory
Adaptive immunity Four characteristics 1. Antigen specificity 2. Diversity 3. Immunological memory 4. Self tolerance Impaired (Central + peripheral) Autoimmune diseases

6 Within central lymphoid organs After BCR/TCR surface expression:
Central tolerance Within central lymphoid organs After BCR/TCR surface expression: Self Ag presentation Major epitopes Criptic epitopes

7 Central B cell tolerance
Self Ag presentation Wide variety of self antigens expressed by stromal cells, hematopoietic cells, and macromolecules circulating in the blood plasma Self-reactive immature B cells Receptor editing Clonal deletion (Apoptosis) Clonal anergy Clonal ignorance

8 Affinity

9 Self-reactivity

10 The presence of autoreactive B lymphocytes in periphery
Central B cell tolerance Receptor editing Clonal deletion Clonal anergy Clonal ignorance Major epitopes Criptic epitopes The presence of autoreactive B lymphocytes in periphery

11 Central T cell tolerance
Self Ag presentation AIRE expression on thymic medulary cells Natural Treg CD4+ CD25+ Major epitopes Clonal deletion Criptic epitopes: clonal ignorance Clonal anergy The presence of autoreactive T lymphocytes in periphery

12 Not normally presented
Criptic epitopes Normal: without tissue injury and cell death Epitopes that normally hidden from the immune system Not normally presented by MHC molecules at sufficient levels Signal 1

13 Affinity Self Cross reactivity High affinity to non-self Ag

14 In periphery (no infection)

15 Peripheral tolerance When Ag exposure to immune system

16 DC Ag uptake & migration
Signal 1, 2, 3 DC Ag uptake & migration DC maturation

17 Costimulation (Signal 2)
T cell activation Ag (Signal 1) + Costimulation (Signal 2) Clonal expansion IL2 IL2Ra=CD25 Autocrine

18 Normal Self Ag Immature DC /migration

19 Lack of signal 2: T cell inactivation
Peripheral tolerance Lack of signal 2: T cell inactivation Self Ag (Signal 1 only) Preventing anti-self response Clonal anergy 19

20 Induction of T cell anergy in periphery
Self Ag

21 Regulation of signal 2 CTLA4

22 Peripheral tolerance Treg: CTLA4 Natural Treg CTLA4 Self Ag

23 Induction of Treg through signal 3
Cytokine (Signal 3) Induction of Treg through signal 3 Signal 1, 2, 3

24 Induction of Treg in periphery
Immature Maintenance of peripheral tolerance Preventing anti-self response Adaptive Treg 24

25 Function of Treg Or cell-cell contact CTLA4

26 in the absence of infection
Maintenance of tolerance by Treg in the absence of infection Adaptive Treg Natural Treg Inhibition of Th17, Th1, Th2, DC maturation

27 Th2 >> Th1

28 AICD FasL Clonal deletion

29 Maintenance of tolerance in infection Apoptosis of effectors
Cell death & self tolerance Apoptosis of effectors Effectors ?

30 Immune privileged sites
Tolerance induction Immunosuppressive cytokines: TGFb Treg FasL expression Non-destructive response Th2 >> Th1 Clonal deletion CMI

31 Maintenance of peripheral tolerance in the absence of infection
Clonal anergy (signal 2) Natural Treg (thymus) & adaptive Treg No inflammatory cytokines (signal 3) Apoptosis of effectors Lack of CD4 T helper cells

32 Activation of autoreactive cells
Ag exposure to immune system Tissue injury and cell death Clearance mechanism Activation of autoreactive cells

33 The breaking of self-tolerance
Myocardial infarction Massive tissue injury and death 心肌梗塞 Ag exposure to immune system Autoimmune response against cardiac antigens Clearance mechanism Transient Inadequate or genetically deficient Autoimmune disease

34 Lymphocyte activation
Self tolerance Lymphocyte activation Innate immunity Effector response Anti-nonself

35 成功不一定取決於起跑點 卻常取決於許多轉折點上

36 The mechanism of self-tolerance
The pre-disposing factors of autoimmune diseases Autoimmune diseases

37 Self tolerance Clearance HLA
Genetic Polymorphism or defect Clearance KO HLA

38 Genetic pre-disposition: HLA
Association of HLA & autoimmune diseases

39 AutoAg presentation

40 Genetic pre-disposition

41 Signal 1 Signal 2 Signal 3 Dead cells Self Ag exposure Activation of
autoreactive cells Pathological B, Th1 or Th2

42 Breaking of self tolerance ? Lymphocyte activation
Immunopathology Lymphocyte activation Innate immunity Effector response Infection: foreign Ag Necrosis: Exposure of self Ag

43 AICD FasL

44 Activated T cells seem to enter all tissues
in very small numbers But accumulation of cells is seen only when antigen is recognized in the site, triggering the production of cytokines that alter tissue barriers

45 Molecular mimicry

46 Infection and autoimmune T cell activation

47 Infection could break self tolerance

48 Infection can break tolerance

49 TLR signals provide co-stimulation for B cell activation

50 Epitope spreading Amplification Disease severity

51 Intramolecular epitope spreading
Clonal ignorance Intramolecular epitope spreading Criptic epitopes Epitopes that normally hidden from the immune system Signal 1 Exposure of T cell epitopes frequently to which the immune system is not tolerant

52 The mechanism of self-tolerance
The pre-disposing factors of autoimmune diseases Autoimmune diseases

53 loss of normal function
Hypersensitivity II-IV & autoimmune disease II: ADCC Cell/organ-specific Systemic III: Immune complex Activation of auto-reactive B/T cells Abnormal infiltration of leukocytes IV: Th1/mac CD8T Inflammation Chronic diseases Interference or even loss of normal function

54 Pathologic T cells Pathologic B cells Stimulating antibody Blocking

55 Identification of the major immune mechanism for disease

56 Ab: Cell destruction

57 Function-blocking antibody
Myasthenia gravis Function-blocking antibody Muscle weakness

58 Stimulating antibody Graves’ disease Hyperthyroid The need to increase
cell metabolism Stimulating antibody Graves’ disease Hyperthyroid

59 Autoantibodies against commom components
of human cells can cause systemic autoimmune disease Cell death dsDNA Nucleoprotein AutoAg exposure Circulation Deposition

60 Deposition of immune complex
SLE: IgG against a wide range of cell-surface and intracellular self Ag that are common to many cell types Deposition of immune complex can cause glomerulonephritis in the kidneys, arthritis in the joints, and a butterfly-shaped skin rash on the face. Skin

61 Role of pathologic T cells
風濕性關節炎 Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) Role of pathologic T cells (IgM, IgG, IgA specific for the Fc region of human IgG) Rheumatoid factor Th1-Mac

62 多發性硬化症 Multiple sclerosis

63 Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE)
Brain autoantigen: myelin basic protein Multiple sclerosis Inflammation Alteration of tissue barriers

64 T cell mediated IDDM Leukocyte infiltration

65 HLA class II expression on inflammatory tissue
Co-stimulation Cytokines

66 Tertiary lympohid stuructures
Hashimoto’s thyroiditis Chronic inflammation Intense leukocyte infiltration Tissue damage Hypothyroid Tertiary lympohid stuructures Activation of thyroid Ag- specific B and T cells

67 Identification of the major immune mechanism for disease
transfer

68 Self tolerance

69 What is the biological significance of the survival of auto-reactive clones in the central lymphoid organs.


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