Sequential steps in immunity
physical barrier (skin, prevents infection)
innate immunity (tissue-resident immune cells activated after entering, recruiting of other immune cells by secretion of chemokines from the blood)
adaptive immunity (switch by transport of antigen to draining lymph node & massive clonal expansion)
Production of immune cells with hematopoiesis
pluripotent hematopoetic stem cells
common lymphoid progenitor (lymphopoiesis to T-/B-/NK-cells & ILC) or common myeloid progenitor
CMP to granulocyte/ macrophage progenitor and to megakaryocytes/platelets (thrombopoiesis) or erythroblast/erythrocyte (erythropoiesis)
or to immature DC, neutrophil, eosinophil, basophil, mast cell precursor & monocyte in the blood
mature DC, mast cell & macrophage in the tissues
Macrophage ontology
also tissue-resident cells
infiltrate tissue early in life before birth
microglia in brain from Yolk Sac
Langerhans Cells in the skin from fetal liver
Kuppfer cells in the liver from fetal liver and bone marrow
Antigen-presenting cells
common feature: constitutive MHCII expression
macrophages
Dendritic cells
B-cells
Difference macrophages & DC
both antigen-presenting cells form the myeloid lineage
macrophage: phagocytosis and activation of bactericidal mechanism & antigen presentation
DC: antigen uptake in peripheral sites, antigen presentation
Receptors on macrophages
Phagocytic receptors
Pathogen recognition receptors
Phagocytosis
bound material internalized in phagosomes
broken down in phagolysosome
Receptors for phagocytosis
C-type lectins with carbohydrate-recognition domain CRD
—>Dectin-1: ß-glucan (glucose polymer) on fungi
—>Mannose receptor: mannosylated ligands (fungi, viruses, bacteria)
Scavenger receports
—>class A: SR-A-1,-2, MARCO (anionic polymers, low density lipoproteins)
—>class B: CD36 (high density lipoproteins
complement receptors (opsonization of pathogen, mark it for easier destruction)
Fc receptors (immunoglobulins, antibodies)
Pathogen recognition receptors PRR
Toll-like receptors TLR
NOD-like receptors (NLR)
RIG-1 like helicase RLH
in innate immune cells
at cell surface but also in cytoplasm & intracellular vesicles
Activation of tissue-resident macrophages
first immune cell actor
secretion of cytokines:
systemic & local effect
IL-1ß: activates vascular endothelium
TNFα: activates vascular endothelium —>permeability higher
IL-6: lymphocyte activation
local effect
CXL8: chemotactic factor recruits neutrophils
IL-12: activates NK cells
systemic immune effect of IL-1ß/IL-6/TNFα
liver: acute-phase proteins (C-reactive protein Mannose-binding lectin)—>activation of complement, opsonization (acts antibody-like but faster production)
DC: TNFα stimulates migration to lymph nodes and maturation —>initiation of adaptive immune response
Local-induced innate immunity
cytokines produced by macrophages cause dilation of local small blood vessels
leukocytes move to periphery of blood vessels as a result of increased expression of adhesion molecules by endothelium
leukocytes extravasate at site of infection
Chemokines
effector cell recruitment
CXC: CXCL8/IL-8—>binds CXCR1 and 2 on neutrophils
CC: CCL2—>binds CCR2B on monocytes
CCL4/RANTES—> binds CCR1,3,5 on T-cells
CXXXC minor subfamily
C chemokines
4 chemokine subfamilies
C chemokine
CC chemokine
CXC chemokine
CXXXC chemokine
—>grouped based on their first 2C from the N terminus
Leukocyte extravasation
rolling adhesion: few opportunities to bind to adhesion molecules (E-selectin on endothelial cells)
tight binding: after activation of endothelium expression of other adhesion molecules (ICAM-1, LFA-1) leads to tight binding, inside-out signaling (changes conformation of LFA-1 for tight interaction)
Diapedesis: pass through 2 endothelial cells
migration: to chemokine producing cell
Adhesion molecules
same function mediated by several proteins
Selectins: bind carbohydrates
—> P-selectin
—>E-selectin
Integrins: bind cell-adhesion molecules & ECM, strong adhesion
—>LFA-1
Immunoglobulin superfamily
—>ICAM-1
—>ICAM-2
macrophage plasticity
M1: proinflammatory /cytotoxic —>TH1 cells produce IFNγ and CD40L activating M1 macrophages at beginning of inflammation
M2: anti-inflammatory/pro-angiogenic/tissue repair: TH2 recruits and activates M2 macrophages via IL-4 and IL-13 at the end of inflammation
Granulocytes
polymorphonuclear—>PMN leukocytes (all besides mast cells)
neutrophils: phagocytosis and activation of bactericidal mechanisms (60% of peripheral blood leukocytes)
eosinophil: killing of antibody-coated parasite
basophil: promotion of allergic responses and augmentation of anti-parasitic immunity
mast cell: release of granules containing histamine and active agents
mast cells
not polymorphonuclear
derived form hematopoietic precursors
blood precursor not identified
tissue-resident granulocytes in mucosa and connective tissue surrounding blood vessels
Granule-content mast cells
enzymes: tryptase, chymase (remodel connective tissue)
(toxic) mediator: histamine, heparin (increase vascular permeability, smooth muscle contraction)
cytokine: TNFα (promotes inflammation, stimulates cytokine production & activates endothelium), IL-4/13/33 (stimulates & amplifies TH2 cell response), IL3/5 (promote eosinophil production and activation)
chemokine: CCL3 (attracts monocytes, macrophages & neutrophils)
lipid mediator: prostaglandins & leukotrienes (smooth muscle contraction, chemotaxis of eosinophils, basophils, and TH2 cells, increase vascular permeability & stimulate mucus production), platelet-activating factor (attracts leukocytes, amplifies production of lipid mediator, activates neutrophils, eosinophils, and platelets)
Histamine
preformed/immediate action upon mast cell activation
4G protein-coupled receptors (H1-H4)
H1 expressed on endothelial cells & muscles
lipid mediators
act after histamine because have to be synthesized after mast cell activation
some similar functions but much more potent
also G-protein-coupled receptors
derive from membrane phospholipids
via phospholipase A2 to arachidonic acid
then with lipoxygenase to leukotrienes or with cyclooxygenase to prostaglandins (inhibited by aspirin/acetylsalicylic acid)
mast cell activation
degranulation
secretion of granules
mediated by multivalent antigen cross-linking IgE antibody
IgE binds FcεRI
FcεRI
IgE receptor
FcγRI- FcγRIII: bind IgG1
FcεRI & FcεRII bind IgE
FcαRI binds IgA1/2
have different cytosolic domains: ITAM/ITIM motif
Granule content neutrophils/eosinophils/basophils
similar to mast cells: tissue remodelling enzymes, cytokines, chemokines, lipid mediators
+microbe toxic products (intracellular killing after phagocytosis of neutrophils)
+extracellular killing of large microbes after degranulation (eosinophils/basophils)
Intracellular microbe killing
acidification in the phagolysosome
respiratory burst in the phagolysosome
anti-microbial peptides
enzymes
Respiratory burst
Rac2 assembles functional NADPH oxidase from cytochrome components
senses fMLF (methionine from start codon in bacteria formylated)
GPCR mediated, Rac2 is a GTPase
G protein in the activation of phagocytes
before ligand binding, GPCR not associated with a G protein (inactive G protein has GDP)
ligand binding causes conformational change in receptor and association with G protein (release GDP and binding GTP)
G protein dissociates into α and ßγ subunits activating other proteins
α subunit cleaves GTP to GDP & reassociation
NADPH oxidase
creation of reactive oxygen species—>consumption of oxygen
hydrogen peroxide eakly toxic —>microbe catalase
hypochlorite HOCl highly toxic
main target ROS: DNA mutations and breaks
or reactive nitrogen species
iNOS= inducible nitric oxide synthase by fMLP cleaves arginine into NO and citruline
Antimicrobial peptides: defensins
2 families with distinct specificity for Gram+/-
proproteins contain amphiphilic domain, released after enzymatic processing
inserts into the membrane and forms a pore
—>disruption of the membrane
Antimicrobial enzymes: lysozyme
active of Gram+
cleaves disaccharide unit of peptidoglycan (in Gram- hidden by lipopolysaccharide)
Antimicrobial enzymes: lactoferrin
active on Gram-
binds to lipid part of LPS (lipid A) and destabilizes outer membrane
Antimicrobial enzymes: elastase
neutrophil specific, not in macrophages
cleaves OmpA (outer membrane protein A)
enzymes specific to eosinophils
major basic protein
eosinophil cationic protein
binds to parasite after degranulation (kill large microbes outside of the cell)
in vitro killing
no mechanism known
disadvantage adaptive immunity
costly —>huge cell proliferation
when possible avoided by the host
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