NK activation & viral infection
against viruses
early production of IFNα/ß, TNFα & IL-12 by tissue cells and resident APC
boost cytokine killing activity but an adaptive immune response is needed for clearance
NK-cell mediated killing followed by T-cell mediated killing of infected cells
Interferons type 1
IFNα/ß/δ
direct antiviral properties & function on immune cells
produced by virus-infected cells & plasmacytoid DC
1 single receptor
interferes with viral replication
interferons type 2
IFNγ
function on immune cells
produced by T & NK cells
singlaing by JAK/STAT pathway (as all cytokines)
Antiviral actions of type 1 interferons
can mediate several function to inhibit virus
JAK/STAT pathway leads in infected cells to transcription of:
Mx proteins: GTPases that interfere with viral replication
oligoadenylate synthetase: creates 2’-5’ (instead of 3’-5’) ATP oligomers activating an endoribonuclease active on viral RNA
PKR = dsRNA dependent PK that stops protein translation
IFIT (interferon-induced proteins with tetratricopeptide repeats) in human IFIT 1/2/3/5 differing in number of repeats and bind viral RNA
immune function:
increased MHCI expression & antigen presentation in all cells
activates DCs, macrophages & NK cells to kill virus-infected cells
induce chemokines to recurit lymphocytes
—> resistance to viral replication, induce MHCI expression in most cell types & activation of NK cells
viral targeting of the MHCI presentation pathway
way to escape CD8+ cytotoxic T-cells
cytomegalovirus: persistent virus -> hijacks different genes impairing MHC presenting pathway
inhibits TAP transport
inhibits proteasome
retains MHC upon transport to the cell surface in vesicles in ER or ERGIC
induces transport of vesicles filled with MHC during transport to the surface to the lysosome (degradation)
MHC presentation inhibited by virus -> no persistence due to susceptibility to NK cells but escape CD8+ cytotoxic T-cells
NK cells
MHCI homologs encoded by viruses
HCMV UL-18 triggers inhibitory NK cell receptors specific for MHCI
->combination allows persistence
Th1-induced immunity against infectious diseases
against intracellular bacteria
enables macrophages to destroy intracellular bacteria
Th1 cells produce IFNγ and CD40L which induce and activate M1 macrophages
->enhances macrophage killing of engulfed bacteria
Fas ligand produced by Th1 cells induce apoptosis of bacteria-laden macrophages
kills chronically infected cells, releasing bacteria to be destroyed by fresh macrophages
Th1 cells - mycobacteria latency & tuberculosis
no killing but keeps infection in control
equilibrium between bacteria & the immune response
formation of granuloma: the central core of infected macrophages that fuse to multi-nucleated giant cells surrounded by activated T-cells and control the spread of mycobacteria
any immunosuppression will lead to tuberculosis -> relapse of mycobacteria
mycobacteria resistant to the effects of macrophage activation -> persist in the cells of the granuloma
Th2-induced immunity against infectious diseases
against parasites
fight big pathogens by secretion of cytokines
Th2 cells produce IL-13 inducing epithelial cell repair & mucus
increased cell turnover & movement help shedding of parasitized epithelial cells
mucus prevents adherence & accelerates the loss of parasite
IL-13 increases smooth muscle contractility -> enhances worm expulsion
IL-5 recruits & activates eosinophils -> produces MPB (major basic protein) which kills parasites
can also mediate ADCC using parasite-specific Ig
Th17-induced immunity against infectious diseases
against extracellular bacteria
IL17 & IL22 produced by Th17 cells induce the production of antimicrobial peptides by epithelial cells
direct killing or growth inhibition of bacteria attached to the epithelium
IL-22 increases epithelial cell turnover -> regeneration of epithelium
increased epithelial cell division & shedding impairs bacterial colonization
HIV route of infection
via mucosa
intraepithelial DCs bind HIV using DC-SIGN (DC leptin receptor binding many different compounds)
HIV is internalized into early endosome
DCs that have migrated to lymph nodes transfer HIV to CD4 T cells
activated by binding & present antigen to the immune system
HIV infection of T cells
virus particle binds to CD4 (gp120) & coreceptor on T cells (CCR5)
viral envelope fuses with the cell membrane allowing the viral genome to enter the cell (gp41)
reverse transcriptase copies viral RNA genomes into double-stranded cDNA
viral cDNA enters the nucleus & is integrated into host DNA (retrovirus)
individuals at high risk but seronegative due to biallelic mutation in CCR5 (chemokine receptor, mutated form doesn’t bind gp120)
1% of the caucasian population
CD4+ T-cell death by HIV
T-cell activation induces low-level transcription of provirus (NFκB dependent, binds proviral LTR starting the transcription)
RNA transcripts are multiply spliced allowing the translation of early genes tat & rev
tat amplifies transcription of viral RNA, rev increases the transport of singly spliced or unspliced viral RNA to the cytoplasm
late proteins Gag, Pol & Env are translated & assembled into virus particles budding from the cell
death by the production of too many virions
Clinical symptoms of HIV
first few weeks typified by an acute influenza-like viral illness (high titers of virus in the blood)
the adaptive immune response follows and controls actual illness & largely restores CD4 T cells but no eradication of the virus -> asymptomatic phase until depletion of CD4 T-cells too high
opportunistic infections more frequent with falling CD4 T-cell count = symptomatic phase
AIDS = acquired immune deficiency syndrome
death by comorbidities
don’t die by HIV as life without CD4+ Tcells is possible in sterile conditions
common pathogen & also tumors
Kaposi sarcoma (induced by human herpes virus 8), non-Hodgkins lymphoma, primary lymphoma of the brain -> immune surveillance normally prevents these tumors
pathogens requiring effective macrophage activation by CD4 T-cells or effective cytotoxic T-cells
spontaneous immunity against HIV
early immune response good -> after a few weeks virus nearly not detectable
Abs against HIV env and HIV p24, HIV specific CTL
but virus still able to escape the response -> control but no cure
high rate of muation leads to immune escape -> HIV RT not a polymerase with an error proof reading activity
many different virions even in a single individual
vaccination against HIV
not achived yet due to high mutation rate
therapeutic approach
CD4+ T cell lymphopenia (vaccination difficult with low CD4+ pool)
silent reservoirs (in other CD4+ cells (low in macrophages) but no replication of the virus)
high rate of mutations (vaccination needs to induce Abs against many different strains)
prophylactic approach
no universal vaccine because high number of HIV strains
generation of broadly neutralizing Abs recognizing different strains achieved
Actual treatment
highly active antiviral therapy targeting proteins important in viral life
entry inhibitors CCR5
RT inhibitors
integrase inhibitors
protease inhibitors (important for budding from infected cells)
-> high cost but efficient reduction of death in infected people
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