Immune
Immune
Immune
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II. Antigens
A. Prior to birth, the immune system removes most T cells specific for self-recognition
determinants
B. Antigens are substances, such as proteins, nucleoproteins, polysaccharides, and some
glycolipids that elicit an immune response and react with products of that response
1. Epitopes (antigenic determinant sites) are areas of an antigen that can stimulate
production of specific antibodies and that can combine with them
2. Valence-the number of epitopes on an antigen; determines number of antibody
molecules an antigen can combine with at one time
C. Hapten-a small organic molecule that is not itself antigenic but that may become
antigenic when bound to a larger carrier molecule
III. Antibodies
A. Antibody (immunoglobulin, Ig)-glycoprotein made in response to an antigen; recognizes
and binds the antigen that caused its production; five different classes: IgG, IgA, IgM,
IgD, and IgE
B. Immunoglobulin structure
1. Multiple antigen-combining sites (usually two; some can form multimeric
antibodies with up to ten combining sites)
2. Basic structure is composed of four polypeptide chains
a. There are two heavy chains and two light chains
b. Within each chain is a constant region (little amino acid sequence
variation within the same class of Ig) and a variable region
3. The four polypeptides are arranged in the form of a flexible Y
a. Fc (crystallizable fragment) is stalk of the Y; contains site at which
antibody can bind to a cell; composed only of constant region
b. Fab (antigen binding fragments) are at the top of the Y; they bind
compatible epitopes of an antigen; composed of both constant and variable
regions
c. Domains-homologous units, each about 100 amino acids long, observed in
heavy chains and in light chains
4. Light chain exists in two distinct forms kappa (k) and lambda (l)
5. There are five types of heavy chains: gamma (g), alpha (a), mu (m), delta (d), and
epsilon (e); these determine, respectively, the five classes (isotypes) of
immunoglobulins: IgG, IgA, IgM, IgD, and IgE
6. In IgG there are four subclasses, and in IgA there are two subclasses; these
subclasses result from variations in the amino acid composition of the heavy
chains; the variations are classified as:
a. Isotypes-variations normally present in all individuals
b. Allotypes-genetically controlled allelic forms of the immunoglobulin
molecules; allelic forms that are not present in all individuals
c. Idiotypes-individual-specific immunoglobulin molecules that differ in the
Fab segments
C. Immunoglobulin function
1. Fab region binds to antigen whereas Fc region mediates binding to host tissue,
various cells of the immune system, some phagocytic cells, or the first component
of the complement system
2. Binding of antibody to an antigen does not destroy the antigen, but marks (targets)
the antigen for immunological attack and activates nonspecific immune responses
that destroy the antigen
3. Opsonization-coating a bacterium with antibodies to stimulate phagocytosis
D. Immunoglobulin classes
1. IgG-monomeric protein, 70% to 75% of Ig pool
a. Antibacterial and antiviral
b. Enhances opsonization; neutralizes toxins
c. Only IgG is able to cross placenta (naturally acquired passive immunity
for newborn)
d. Activates the complement system by the classical pathway
e. Four subclasses with some differences in function
2. IgM-pentameric protein, 10% of Ig pool
a. First antibody made during B-cell maturation and first antibody secreted
into serum during primary antibody response
b. Never leaves the bloodstream
c. Agglutinates bacteria and activates complement by classical pathway;
enhances phagocytosis of target cells
d. Some may be red blood cell agglutinins
e. Up to 5% may be hexameric; hexameric form is better able to activate the
complement system than pentameric IgM; bacterial cell wall antigens may
directly stimulate B cells to produce hexameric form
3. IgA-15% of Ig pool
a. Some monomeric forms in serum, but most is dimeric and associated with
a protein called the secretory component (secretory IgA or sIgA)
b. sIgA is primary Ig of mucosal-associated lymphoid tissue; also found in
saliva, tears, and breast milk (protects nursing newborns); helps rid the
body of antigen-antibody complexes by excretion; functions in alternate
complement pathway
4. IgD-monomeric protein, trace amounts in serum
a. Does not activate the complement system and cannot cross the placenta
b. Abundant on surface of B cells where it plays a role in signaling B cells to
start antibody production
5. IgE-monomeric protein, less than 1% of Ig pool
a. Skin-sensitizing and anaphylactic antibodies
b. When an antigen cross-links two molecules of IgE on the surface of a mast
cell or basophil, it triggers release of histamine; stimulates eosinophilia
and gut hypermotility, which helps to eliminate helminthic parasites
E. Diversity of antibodies-three mechanisms contribute to the generation of antibody
diversity
1. Combinatorial joining
a. Ig genes are interrupted or split genes with many exons; in light chain
gene, there are three types of exons (C,V, and J); in heavy chain gene
there are four types of exons (C, V, J, and D)
b. During differentiation of B cells, one C exon, one V exon, and one J exon
are joined together to make a functional light chain gene; one C, one V,
one J, and one D are joined together to make a functional heavy chain
gene; since there are numerous C, V, J, and D exons, many different
combinations are possible (2x108)
c. The number of different antibodies possible is the product of the number
of light chains possible and the number of heavy chains possible
2. Somatic mutations-the V regions of germ-line DNA are susceptible to a high rate
of somatic mutation during B-cell development
3. Alternate joining points-the same exons can be joined at different nucleotides,
thus increasing the number of codons and the possible diversity
F. Specificity of antibodies-clonal selection theory
1. Because of combinatorial joining and somatic mutation, there are a small number
of B cells capable of responding to any given antigen; each group of cells is
derived asexually from a parent cell and is referred to as a clone; there is a large,
diverse population of B-cell clones that collectively are capable of responding to
many possible antigens
2. Identical antibody molecules, specific to each B cell and a single antigen, are
integrated into the plasma membrane of B cell; when these bind the appropriate
antigen the B cell is stimulated to divide and differentiate into two populations of
cells: plasma cells and memory cells
a. Plasma cells are protein factories that produce about 2,000 antibodies per
second for their brief life span (5-7 days)
b. Memory cells can initiate antibody-mediated immune response if they are
stimulated by being bound to the antigen; they circulate more actively
from blood to lymph and have long life spans (years or decades); are
responsible for rapid secondary response; are not produced unless B cell
has been appropriately signaled by activated T-helper cell
G. Sources of antibodies
1. Immunization-purified antigen is injected into host; specific B-cell clone
recognizes and responds by proliferating and producing antibodies
a. To promote antigen stimulation, antigen may be mixed with an adjuvant (a
molecule that enhances rate and quantity of antibodies produced)
b. Blood withdrawn from immunized host is allowed to clot; fluid remaining
is called serum
c. Serum obtained from immunized host is called antiserum
d. Limitations 1) This method results in polyclonal antibodies, which have
different epitope specificities; thus sensitivity is lower, and the antibodies
often cross-react with closely related antigens 2) Repeated injections with
antiserum from one species into another can cause serious allergic
reactions 3) Antiserum contains a mixture of antibodies, not all of which
are of interest
2. Primary antibody response-with immunization and natural acquired immunity,
levels (titer) of antibody change over time
a. Initial lag phase of several days
b. Log phase-antibody titer rises logarithmically
c. Plateau phase-antibody titer stabilizes
d. Decline phase-antibody titer decreases because the antibodies are
metabolized or cleared from the circulation
e. Mostly IgM (low-affinity antibodies)
3. Secondary antibody response (amnestic response)-has shorter lag phase, higher
antibody titer, and more IgG, which have high affinity for antigens (affinity
maturation)
4. Hybridomas-overcome some of the limitations of antisera by producing a
monoclonal antibody with a single specificity
a. Made by injecting animals with antigen; when they begin to produce
antibodies, spleen is removed and plasma cells are isolated
b. Plasma cells are fused with myeloma cells (easily cultured tumor cells of
the immune system that produce large quantities of antibodies); the
resulting fused cells are hybridomas
c. Hybridomas are cultured so that each grows into a separate colony; these
are screened to identify those producing desired antibody
d. Monoclonal antibodies have a variety of uses: tissue typing for transplants,
identification and epidemiological study of infectious microorganisms,
identification of tumor and other surface antigens, classification of
leukemias and identification of T-cell populations
V. B-Cell Biology
A. Have surface molecules important to their function
1. Surface molecules include B-cell antigen receptors (BCRs-IgM and IgD on
surface of B cell), Fc receptors, and complement receptors
2. Binding of receptors to target molecules is involved in activation of B cell and in
phagocytosis, processing, and presentation of antigens
B. Antigen-antibody binding-occurs within the pocket formed by folding the VH and VL
regions of Fab; binding is due to weak, noncovalent bonds and in most cases shapes of
epitope and binding site must be highly complementary (i.e., lock and key) for efficient
binding; in at least one case, it is known that the antigen induces a shape change of the
antigen-binding site (induced fit mechanism); high complementarity of epitope and
binding site provides for the high specificity associated with antigen-antibody binding
C. B-cell activation
1. T-dependent antigen triggering
a. Macrophage ingests the antigen or antigen-bearing organism, processes
the antigen, and displays a fragment of the antigen and with its Class II
MHC to a T-helper cell; macrophage also secretes interleukins (IL-1 and
IL-6) b IL-1 and IL-6 stimulate the T-helper cell to divide and secrete
interleukins (IL- 2, IL-4, IL-5, and IL-6); IL-1 also induces fever
b. IL-2, IL-4, IL-5 and IL-6 stimulate proliferation of the T-helper cell
c. The resulting T-helper clones bind to B cells presenting the appropriate
antigen on their surface; they also secrete B-cell growth factor (BCGF),
which causes B cells to divide, and B-cell differentiation factor (BCDF),
which causes the B cells to differentiate into plasma cells and produce
antibodies
d. Note that this pathway for B-cell activation also requires an interaction
between the B cell and the antigen; B cell recognizes antigen through its
BCRs
2. T-independent antigen triggering-causes production of IgM; occurs with
polymeric antigens, which have a large number of identical epitopes; antibodies
produced, which have low affinity for antigen, never switch to high-affinity IgG
or other isotypes; no memory cells are produced
A. Activation of this pathway requires interaction of antibody with an antigen that is usually
cell bound
B. Following antigen-antibody binding, a complement component (C1) attaches to Fc; this
leads to a cascade of enzymatic reactions that culminate in the production of a complex
of proteins (C5b67)
C. This complex binds membrane of the target cell; two other complement components then
bind, forming the membrane attack complex; this creates a pore in the membrane of the
target cell, causing it to lyse
A. Nonresponse to self; three mechanisms have been proposed: negative selection by clonal
deletion, induction of anergy, and inhibition of immune response by T-suppressor cells
B. Negative selection by clonal deletion-T cells with ability to interact with self-antigens are
destroyed in the thymus
C. Induction of anergy-an example of peripheral tolerance (tolerance that develops in areas
other than thymus); lymphocytes that can interact with self-antigens are given incomplete
activation signals, causing them to enter into an unresponsive state known as anergy
A. Response of a host to any particular pathogen may involve a complex interaction between
host and pathogen, as well as the components of both nonspecific and specific immunity
B. Immunity to viral infection
1. Antibodies neutralize viruses
2. Antibodies enhance phagocytosis
3. Interferons shut down protein synthesis in virus-infected cells; interferons
stimulate the activity of T cells and NK cells
4. Activated macrophages and cytotoxic T cells destroy virus-infected cells
C. Immunity to bacterial infections
1. Antibodies trigger complement attack by the classical pathway, leading to the
formation of the membrane attack complex
2. Complement activation attracts neutrophils and macrophages to site of infection
3. Toxin neutralization
4. Activated macrophages and cytotoxic T cells destroy cells infected with
intracellular pathogenic bacteria