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Innate immunity Properties of innate immunity Components of innate immunity –Epithelial barriers –Cellular mechanisms –Humoral mechanisms Role of innate immunity in stimulating adaptive immune response
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Principle mechanisms of innate and adaptive immunity
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Mechanisms of innate immunity - phylogenetically older - exist before or react immediately after contact with pathogen - first line of defense - are not enhanced upon repetead contact with pathogen (no memory) - react predominantly to infectious agents - stimulate and shape adaptive imunity
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Components of innate immunity - epithelial barriers (skin and mucosal membranes) - humoral components (complement, cytokines etc.) - cells (phagocytes, NK cells...)
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- physical barrier Functions of epithelia in innate immunty
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- chemical barrier (production of antimicrobial peptides) - physical barrier Functions of epithelia in innate immunty
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- intraepithelial lymphocytes - normal bacterial flora - chemical barrier (production of antimicrobial peptides) - physical barrier Functions of epithelia in innate immunty
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Cells of innate immunity NK cells Dendritic cells Mast cells Neutrophils Monocytes/Macrophages Phagocytosis, inflammation Phagocytosis, inflammation, T-cell activation, tissue repair Killing of infected or tumor cells Eosinophils Inflammation Defense against parasites Phagocytosis, activation of naive T-cells Cell type Pricipal function(s)
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Role of phagocytes in innate immunity Order of events in infection 1. Entry of pathogen
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Role of phagocytes in innate immunity Order of events in infection 1. Entry of pathogen 2. Recognition of pathogen (macrophages and dendritic cells) - molecular patterns and receptors
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Molecular patterns Structures common for certain groups/classes of pathogens - essential for their life, replication and/or infectivity structures of bacterial cell wall (LPS, peptidoglycan, flagellin...) nucleic acids of pathogens (dsRNA, unmethylated CpG dinucleotides...) - not present on human cells Lipoproteins Flagellin Examples:
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Role of phagocytes in innate immunity Order of events in infection 1. Entry of pathogen 2. Recognition of pathogen 3. Phagocytosis and killing of a pathogen (macrophages) - reactive oxygen species (ROS), nitric oxide (NO) and lysosomal enzymes
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Phagocytosis and killing of microbes Pathogen recognition
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Zipping of membrane around microbe Phagocytosis and killing of microbes
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Ingestion of microbe Phagocytosis and killing of microbes
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Fusion of phagosome with lysosome Phagocytosis and killing of microbes
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Phagocyte activation Phagocytosis and killing of microbes
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Killing of microbe Phagocytosis and killing of microbes http://highered.mcgraw- hill.com/sites/0072556781/student_view0/chapt er31/animation_quiz_3.html
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Role of phagocytes in innate immunity Order of events in infection 1. Entry of pathogen 2. Recognition of pathogen 3. Phagocytosis and killing of a pathogen 4. Induction of inflammation (macrophages) - production of pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF, IL-1, chemokines...)
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Inflammation induction Proinflammatory cytokines TNF ― Tumor Necrosis Factor IL-1 ― Interleukin-1 Chemokines ― Chemotactic cytokines
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Role of phagocytes in innate immunity Order of events in infection 1. Entry of pathogen 2. Recognition of pathogen 3. Phagocytosis and killing of a pathogen 4. Inflammation induction 5. Attraction of cells to infection site - adhesive molecules (selectins and integrins) and chemokines
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Leukocytes arrive at the site of infection (extravasation) Weak binding and rolling Activation and firm binding Endothelium TNF & IL-1 Transmigration Arrival to the site of infection Selectins Integrins Various adhesive molecules Chemokines Macrophages http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WEGGMaRX8f0 http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=DMvixApKzKs In some inflammatory diseases therapy is directed against proinflammatory cytokines or adhesive molecules (eg: TNF in rheumatoid arthritis or VLA-4 in multiple sclerosis)
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Role of phagocytes in innate immunity Order of events in infection 1. Entry of pathogen 2. Recognition of pathogen 3. Phagocytosis and killing of a pathogen 4. Inflammation induction 5. Attraction of cells to infection site 6. Pathogen elimination and/or adaptive immunity activation (dendritic cells) - cytokines, costimulatory molecules...
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Role of phagocytes in innate immunity Order of events in infection 1. Entry of pathogen 2. Recognition of pathogen 3. Phagocytosis and killing of a pathogen 4. Inflammation induction 5. Attraction of cells to infection site 6. Pathogen elimination and/or adaptive immunity activation 7. Tissue repair and remodeling (macrophages) - enzymes and cytokines (growth factors, metaloproteinases...)
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Role of NK cells in innate immunity Killing of cells infected by intracellular pathogens (eg. viruses) and tumor cells NK – Natural killer
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Role of NK cells in innate immunity NK – Natural killer Killing of cells infected by intracellular pathogens (eg. viruses) and tumor cells Activation of macrophages (by IFN- γ )
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NK cell killer function Depends on balanse of signals by activating and inhibitory receptors Inhibitory Activating
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Inhibitory Activating NK cell is inhibited NO KILLING NK cell killer function Depends on balanse of signals by activating and inhibitory receptors
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Inhibitory Activating NK cell is activated KILLING NK cell killer function Depends on balanse of signals by activating and inhibitory receptors
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Inhibitory Activating - activating receptors recognize stress-derrived structures on cells (including infected and malignant cells) - inhibitory receptors recognize MHC class one molecule NK cell killer function Depends on balanse of signals by activating and inhibitory receptors
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Mechanism of NK cell recognition
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Apoptosis induction in infected and tumor cells Killing mechanisms same as in cytotoxic T-cells - Perforin and granzymes - FasL and Fas granzymes Infected or tumor cell apoptosis NK cell perforin FasL Fas NK cell killer function
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- complement proteins (8 th week seminar) - other plasma proteins (CRP, MBL etc.) - cytokines Humoral mechanism of innate immunity
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Cytokines in innate immunity Inflammation induction (TNF, IL-1, chemokines...)
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Macrophage and NK cell Activation (IL-12 and IFN-γ) Antiviral effects (IFN type I, IFN-α and IFN-β) Differentiation of T-cell subpopulation (eg. IL-12) (eg. INF-α in HCV therapy) Cytokines in innate immunity Inflammation induction (TNF, IL-1, chemokines...)
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Role of innate immunity in stimulation of adaptive immune response T or B-cells need two signals for activation First signal antigen recognition Second signal derrived by innate immunity
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Thanks for your attention! Questions?
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Peptide antibiotics productionj.Innate immunity cells stimulate adaptive immunity by 10. Leukocyte migrationi.Bacteria can avoid phagocytosis by9. When a target cell does not express MHC class I h.IL-12 produced by macrophages stimulates 8. Structures that a group of pathogens has in common g.Chemokynes are important for7. NK and T- cellsf.NK cells are activated6. molecules that provide “second signal”e.NK cells5. TNF, IL-1 and other mediatorsd.Macrophages kill phagocytosed microbes by 4. Polysaccharide capsule productionc.Macrophages stimmulate inflammation by production of 3. Kill our own virus-infected cellsb.Epithelial cells provide chemical barrier for pathogens by 2. Production of enzymes, ROS and NOa.Receptors on innate immunity cells recognize 1. 10.____9.____8.____7.____6.____5.____4.____3.____2.____1.____ gjda bhifce
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