Major players of the immune system
Innate and adaptive immune system
- different components which react in different locations and time
- dendritic cells bridge innate and adaptive immune system through their ability to migrate and present antigen
B vs T cells
Klausurfrage
B cells and T cells see antigen in different ways (soluble, cell-bound)
and cover different pathogenic locations (body fluids, intracellular infection)
B cells and T cells see antigen in different ways
3 signals for T cell activation
- antigen specific signal 1 (MHC/antigen)
- survival signal 2 (co-stimulation)
- cytokines regulate the differentiation
How the T cell sees its antigen
MHC restriction
MHC-restricted antigen recognition, or MHC restriction, refers to the fact that a T cell can interact with a self-major histocompatibility complex molecule and a foreign peptide bound to it, but will only respond to the antigen when it is bound to a particular MHC molecule.[1]
mhc major histocompatibility complex
MHC
MHC: major histocompatibility antigens
MHC diversity
Each allelic version has a different peptide binding
groove and presents a different set of peptides
HLA alleles influence …?
HLA alleles influence antigen recognition, immune
response and disease prevalence/severity/susceptibility
Klausurfrage 3 signals of t cell activation
Co-stimulation is provided by dendritic cells
Polarizing cytokines come from-…?
the environment
t cell types
2 signals for B cell activation
Activated B cells are …?
Different effector cells are necessary to cover
different pathogen classes and body locations
Kinetics of immune response & memory
Effector cells of the innate immunity
Regulation of NK cell activity
Regulation of NK cells :
Inhibition of NK cells (MHC class Ia,
non-classical MHC class Ib)
Activation of NK cells (i.e. MICA/B)
NK cell activation vs T cell activation
Immune evasion:
klausurfrage
Antigenic shift vs drift
Pathogens use diverse mechanisms to evade the
attack and clearance through the immune system
Neutralizing autoantibodies to type I IFNs underlie life-threatening COVID-19 pneumonia
Why is the loss of CD4 T cells detrimental?
CD4 cells, also known as helper T-cells, trigger the immune response by recognizing pathogens and secreting cytokines in order to signal to other immune cells, including CD8cells. CD4 cells are not directly responsible for the attack of the pathogens; on the other hand, CD8 cells, known as the cytotoxic T-cells, destroy the infected cells.
SARS-CoV-2 immunopathology
The immune reaction to SARS-CoV-2 infection is characterized by differentiation and proliferation of a variety of immune cells with immune mediator production and release, and activation of other pathogen resistance mechanisms.
MHC structure is related to its function
Function of MHC proteins
Polymorphism is linked to antigen presentation
Mechanisms of innate immune control
Last changeda year ago