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Chapter 9 Immunogenetics
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Immune responses
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Innate Immune Response I
Types of innate immune response phagocytes The complement system natural killer cells MBL : mannose-binding lectin MASP : MBL-associated serine proteases
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Innate Immune Response II
recognition by cell-surface receptors (eg. the Toll-like receptor) lipopolysaccharides and peptidoglycans of bacteria unmethylated CpG motifs of bacterial DNAs ds RNAs of virus
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Adaptive immune response
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Humoral immune system I
Class II MHC molecules in antigen-presenting cells carry foreign peptides to the surface of the cell, where the foreign peptide is recognized by a helper T cell. The T cell secretes cytokines, which stimulate B cells whose immunoglobulins will bind to the foreign peptide. These B cells become plasma cells, which secrete antibodies into the circulation to bind with the microbe, helping to combat the infection. (Modified from Nossal GJ: Life, death and the immune system. Sci Am 1993;269:53-62.)
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Humoral immune system II
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Cellular immune system I
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Cellular immune system II
ABC transporter
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Cellular immune system III
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Cellular immune system IV
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Lymphocyte Activation
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An antibody molecule
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Immunoglobulin Genes chromosome 2: κ light chain
chromosome 14 (4 gene segments): heavy chains (γ, μ,α,δ, and ε)
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Immunoglobulin Genes and Structure
light chain: C, V, J genes heavy chain: C, V, D, J genes
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Basis of Immunoglobulin Diversity
multiple germline immunoglobulin genes more than 80 different V segments 6 different J segments more than 30 different D segments somatic recombination (VDJ recombination) light chain: recombination of V and J heavy chain: recombination of V, D, and J deletion by recombinases encoded by RAG1 and RAG2 genes (11p13), and joining by ligases Junctional diversity varied amino acid sequences at the junctions somatic hypermutation secondary differentiation of B-lymphocytes by stimulation by a foreign antigen multiple combination of heavy and light chains
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Immunoglobulin Diversity
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Somatic VDJ recombination and somatic hypermutation
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T-cell Receptors similar to immunoglobulins, but not secreted
heterodimers (90% αβ and 10% γδ) α,δ on chromosome 14 β,γ on chromosome 7 T-cell receptor diversity multiple germline gene segments VDJ somatic recombination junctional diversity but no somatic hypermutation → tolerance of self peptide and recognition of MHC molecules
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MHC class I molecules expressed on the surface of nearly all cells
complex formation with foreign peptides → recognized by receptors on the surface of cytotoxic T-lymphocytes
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MHC class I molecules heterodimers class I loci
a heavy glycoprotein chain α a light chain (β2-microglobulin, in chromosome 15) class I loci HLA-A, -B, and -C: in 1.8 Mb, highly polymorphic, each dozens of alleles additional genes and pseudogenes
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MHC class II molecules expressed on the surface of antigen-presenting cells (phagocytes and B-cells) association with foreign peptides → recognized by receptors on the surface of helper T cells heterodimer (α,β) class II loci HLA-DP, -DQ, and -DR on chromosome 6 highly polymorphic cf. TAP1 and TAP2 in class II region: transporter proteins
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Significance of polymorphic MHC molecules
results of natural selection for allelic variability providing effective defense against a variety of pathogens some specific actions of MHC molecules HLA-B53: protective against malaria HLA-DRB1 1302: protective against hepatitis B MHC restriction required for T cell functions and natural killer cells, but not for complement systems different class I and class II MHC molecules among individuals same class I and class II MHC molecules within an individuals different T-cell receptors and immunoglobulins from cell to cell within an individuals
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Chromosome Location and Function of Major Immune Response Genes
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MHC-Disease Association
linkage disequilibrium (no causal links) HLA-A3 ↔ hemochromatosis HLA-DQA1 and -DQB1 ↔ narcolepsy (the hypocretin type 2 receptor gene nearby) causal associations HLA-DQB1: undefined autoimmunity → type 1 diabetes HLA-B7: infection of a specific microbe and then autoimmunity → ankylosing spondylitis maybe resulted from cross-reaction in which the immune system mistakes formolecular mimicry of foreign peptides
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Examples of Major Histocompatibility Complex and Disease Associations
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ABO system genes: a single gene on chromosome 9 (IA, IB, IO)
N-acetylaminogalactosyltransferase : A enzyme Galacosyltransferase : B enzyme A, B antigen expression on erythrocyte surface
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Rh system genes: D*, C, E on chromosome 1
DD, Dd: Rh positive dd: Rh negative anti-Rh antibody production by a direct stimulus Rh maternal-fetal incompatibility (DD, Dd father and dd mother) erythroblastosis fetalis and anemia resulting from hemolysis (hemolytic disease of the newborn, HDN) spontaneous abortion or stillbirth cerebral damage after birth (mental retardation, cerebral palsy, deafness) prevented by Rh immunoglobulin cf. A, B, O maternal-fetal incompatibility a mother with type O/a fetus with type A or B mild symptoms, protect against Rh incompatibility
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B-cell immunodeficiency diseases
X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA) mainly male, XR, no B cells, no IgG by mutations of a B-cell tyrosine kinase (Bruton's tyrosine kinase, BTK) treated by γ-globulin administration autosomal B-cell immunodeficiency by mutations of immunoglobulin chains
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T-cell immunodeficiency diseases
affecting T-cells → affecting B-cells → severe combined immune deficiency (SCID) by mutations of γ chains of cytokine receptors (IL 2, 4, 7, 9, 15, and 21) → X-linked SCID 50% of SCID, XR by mutation of JAK3 gene autosomal SCID, similar to X-SCID by adenosine deaminase (ADA) deficiency 15%, autosomal SCID buildup of purine metabolites treated by bone marrow transplantation and gene therapy by mutations of RAG1 and RAG2 abnormal VDJ recombinations of T-cell and B-cell receptors
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Bare lymphocyte syndromes
BLS I (rare) by mutations of TAP2 (or TAP1, TAPBP) gene no MHC I expression → reduced number of functional T and B cells BLS II (major) by mutations of transcriptional factors for MHC II expression class II trans-activator (CIITA) regulatory factor of the X box 5 (RFX5) RFX-associated protein (RFXAP) RFX ankyrin repeats (RFXANK; also known as RFXB) no MHC II expression on APC → no antibody production
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Chronic granulomatous disease (CGD)
Abnormal NADPH oxidase (PHOX) in phagocytes by mutations of a subunit of cytochrome b, XR (gp91 protein, p91-PHOX) by mutations of some autosomal genes, AR difficulty forming the reactive oxygen compounds (most importantly, the superoxide radical) used to kill certain ingested pathogens normal phagocytosis of pathogenes, but no killing → forming granulomas → recurrent severe infections superoxide
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Primary Immunodeficiency Diseases
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