General Microbiology (Micr300) Lecture 15 Adaptive Immunity (Text Chapter: 22.5-22.11)

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Transcript of General Microbiology (Micr300) Lecture 15 Adaptive Immunity (Text Chapter: 22.5-22.11)

General Microbiology (Micr300)

Lecture 15Adaptive Immunity

(Text Chapter: 22.5-22.11)

Lymphocytes: The Cellular Arms of Adaptive Immunity

T-lymphocytes Mature in thymus Interact with other defense cells (T helper

cells, TH) or kill abnormal cells (cytotoxic T cells, Tc)

B-lymphocytes Mature in bone marrow Produce antibodies

The Adaptive Immune Response

In adaptive immunity, phagocytes present antigen to specific T cells, triggering the proliferation of effector T cells and subsequently the production of antibodies. Immune T cells and antibodies attack directly or indirectly the antigen.

The adaptive immune response is characterized by specificity for the antigen, the ability to respond more vigorously when reexposed to the same antigen (memory), and the ability to discriminate self antigens from nonself antigens (tolerance) (Figure 22.8).

Specific Interactions

Memory

Tolerance

Immunogens Immunogens are foreign macromolecules

that induce an immune response. Molecular size, complexity, and physical form are intrinsic properties of immunogens.

Molecular size is an important component of immunogenicity. For example, low-molecular-weight compounds called haptens cannot induce an immune response but can bind to antibodies. Because haptens are bound by antibodies, they are antigens even though they are not immunogenic.

Structure of the T-cell Receptor (TCR)

Antigenic Determinants

Epitope

The antibody or TCR does not interact with the antigenic macromolecule as a whole but only against a distinct portion of the molecule called an antigenic determinant or epitope.

Presentation of Antigen to T Lymphocytes

T cells recognize digested antigens presented by antigen-presenting cells (APCs) or by pathogen-infected cells.

At the molecular level, TCRs bind peptide antigens presented by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) proteins. Class I MHC proteins are found on the surfaces of all nucleated cells.

Class II MHC proteins are found only on the surface of B lymphocytes, macrophages, and dendritic cells, all of which are APCs (Figure 22.11).

Class IMHC

Class IIMHC

T-Cytotoxic Cells and Natural Killer Cells

T-cytotoxic (TC) cells recognize antigens presented via MHC I on virus-infected host cells and tumor cells through antigen-specific TCRs. Antigen-specific recognition triggers killing via perforin and granzymes (Figure 22.13).

TC use a special molecule called CD8 to dock onto MHC I.

T-Cytotoxic Cells

T-Helper Cells T helper cells secrete cytokines to

direct the function of other immune cells.

Depending on the cytokine profile T helper cells are dived into subgroups TH1 cells enhance phagocyte function in

destroying pathogens and promote inflammation

TH2 cells stimulate B cells to proliferate, augment antibody production and develop into plasma cells (Figure 22.14).

T-Helper Cells

Pro-inflammatorycytokines

T cell – B cellInteraction

Antibody inducing cytokines

Antibodies (Immunoglobulins)

Immunoglobulin (Ig) (antibody) proteins consist of four chains, two heavy and two light (Figure 22.15). Each chain consists of different domains.

The amino-terminal region is a variable domain, meaning that the amino acid sequence in this structural region differs in each different antibody. The antigen-binding site is formed by the interaction of variable regions of heavy and light chains.

The constant regions are very uniform among groups of antibodies

There are 5 major groups of antibodies (isotypes) that differ in the make up of their constant region of the heavy chain (IgG, IgM, IgA, IgD, IgE)

Immunoglobulin G Structure

L: light chainH: heavy chain

Fab(antigen-binding fragment)

Fc(constant fragment)

The Antigen Binding Groove: Lock-Key Principle

Antibody Isotypes

Isotype IgG IgM IgA IgD IgE

Heavy chain type

Main function Phagocytosis

AgglutinationComplement

activation

Placenta-transfer

Neutralization

Agglutination

Complement activation

Neutralization

Mucosal protection

Neutralization

?

B cell maturation

marker

Allergies

Effector Functions of Antibodies

Neutralization (blocking)

Opsonization (enhancing phagocytosis)

Complement Activation (direct killing, enhancing phagocytosis)

Antibody Production

Antibody production is initiated by antigen contact with an antigen-specific B cell and is always IgM (Primary antibody response)

B cells require support from T helper cells for full production of antibodies including other isotypes B cells take up and process antigen, present it

to T helper cells, which in turn secrete cytokines to signal large scale production and isotype switch

Antibody Production

Some activated B cells develop into plasma cells and produce and secrete large amounts of antibody of isotypes other than IgM

Some activated B cells develop into long living memory cells and can rapidly produce large quantities (high titers) of antibodies upon reexposure to antigen (secondary antibody response, Figure 22.21).

Memory B cells do not need T cell activation

Primary &SecondaryAntibody Responses

Antibodies As Tool Inject antigen into

rabbit (with immune stimulator = adjuvant)

Re-inject for 2 or 3 times

Rabbit will make antibodies against the antigen

Draw blood, prepare serum = polyclonal antibodies

Antibodies in Immunoassays: ELISA