Innate Immunity: Dr. Prasanna Honnavar, PHD
Innate Immunity: Dr. Prasanna Honnavar, PHD
Innate Immunity: Dr. Prasanna Honnavar, PHD
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INNATE IMMUNITY
Immune System
Adaptive
Innate
(Specific)
(Nonspecific)
2 line of defense
o
1o line of defense Protects/re-exposure
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General Features and Specificity of Innate
Immune System
• Principal types of reaction: inflammation , anti-viral defense
• Responds same way to repeat microbial encounters
• Recognizes structures shared by various classes of microbes and
not present on normal host cells
• Components evolve to recognize structures of microbes often
essential for survival and infectivity of these microbes (PAMP)
• Recognizes molecules released from damaged or necrotic cells
(DAMP)
• PRRs encoded in germline, not produced by somatic
recombination of genes; non-clonal distribution
• Does not react against host
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Specificity and Receptors of Innate and
Adaptive Immunity
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Cellular Locations of Receptors of the
Innate Immune System
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Structure and Specificities of
Toll-like receptors (TLRs)
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Signaling Functions of TLRs
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The Inflammasome
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Components of Innate Immunity
• Epithelia
• NK cells
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Functions of Epithelia in Innate Immunity
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Phagocytes
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Stages in the maturation of mononuclear
phagocytes
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Activation and Functions of Macrophages
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Classical and Alternative Macrophage
Activation
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Dendritic Cells
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Mast Cells
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Natural Killer (NK) Cells
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Functions of NK Cells
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Activating and Inhibitory receptors of
NK cells
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Other Classes of Lymphocytes
• γδ T cells (epithelia)
• NK-T cells (epithelia, lymphoid organs)
• B-1 cells (peritoneal cavity, mucosal tissue)
• Marginal zone B cells (edges of lymphoid follicles)
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The Complement System
• Enzymatic Cascade
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Pathways of Complement Activation
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Other Plasma Proteins of Innate Immunity
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Cytokines of Innate Immunity
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Cytokines of Innate Immunity (contd..)
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Cytokines of Innate Immunity (contd..)
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Innate Immune Reactions
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Acute Inflammatory Response
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Recruitment of Phagocytes to Sites of
Infection and Tissue Damage
• Extravascular migration
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What Phagocytes do?
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Phagocytosis and intra-cellular killing of
microbes
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Phagocytosis and intra-cellular killing of
microbes
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Antiviral Defense
• Type I IFNs (several forms of IFN-α and one IFN-β), secreted by
many cell types infected by viruses
• Major source plasmacytoid dendritic cell
• Bind to IFN receptor on adjacent uninfected cells, signaling
pathways activated that inhibit viral replication and destroy viral
genomes
• Basis for use of IFN-α to treat some forms of chronic viral
hepatitis
• Enhance ability of NK cells to kill virus-infected cells
• Part of innate response to viral infections includes enhanced
apoptosis of infected cells
• Death of infected cells eliminates reservoir of infection
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Regulation of Innate Immune Responses
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Evasion of Innate Immunity by Microbes
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Role of Innate Immunity in Stimulating
Adaptive Immune Responses
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Two-signal requirement for
lymphocyte activation
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REVIEW QUESTIONS
• How does the specificity of innate immunity differ from that of adaptive
immunity?
• What are examples of microbial substances recognized by the innate
immune system, and what are the receptors for these substances?
• What is the inflammasome, and how is it stimulated?
• What are the mechanisms by which the epithelium of the skin prevents
the entry of microbes?
• How do phagocytes ingest and kill microbes?
• What is the role of MHC molecules in the recognition of infected cells by
NK cells, and what is the physiologic significance of this recognition?
• What are the roles of the following cytokines in defense against
infections: (a) TNF, (b) IL-12, and (c) type I interferon?
• How do innate immune responses enhance adaptive immunity?
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