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IMMUNOLOGIC

TOLERANCE
AND
AUTOIMMUNITY.
.
Immunolgic tolerance
•B Cell Tolerance
•T Cell Tolerance
• Clonal Deletion
• Clonal Anergy
• Immunogen vs Tolerogen
• Mechanism of breaking B and T Cell
Tolerance (autoimmunity)
B or T CELL TOLERANCE
is a process that involves the faillure of B or T cell to respond
to self antigens (normal) or foreign antigens (abnormal)
CLONAL DELETION
This process involved the elimination of immature B or
T cells after antigen binds to their receptor.
CLONAL ANERGY
This process involves the inability of mature B or T cells
to respond to antigen even after it binds to
its receptor.
IMMUNOGEN
The antigen is called an immunogen if it induces
activation of a B or T cell
TOLEROGEN
The antigen is called tolerogen if it does not activate
a B or T cell (Its induce B or T cell clonal anergy).
B CELL TOLERANCE
IgM,IgD

Stem Cell Pro-B Pre-B Immature B Mature B Effector B


Bone Marrow Peripheral lymphoid
organ or tissue
No antigen dependence Self antigen Foreign antigen
RAG-1 and RAG-2 Selection Performance
Effector function.

Clonal Deletion Clonal anergy


Receptor Editing
(apoptosis) Clonal deletion

CentralTolerance Peripherial Tolerance


T CELLS TOLERANCE α ß
TCR

Stem Cell Pro-T Pre-T Immature T Mature T Naive mature T


BM Thymus Periphery
No respon to antigen Pos&Neg selec- activation by
tion (self ant) Foreign ant
RAG 1 & RAG 2 expression

Clonal Deletion T cell regulator Clonal anergy


(apoptosis) Clonal deletion

CentralTolerance Peripherial Tolerance


Figure 11-3 Central T cell tolerance. Recognition of self antigens by immature T cells in the
thymus may lead to death of the cells (negative selection, or deletion) or the development
of regulatory T cells that enter peripheral tissues.

© 2005 Elsevier
Contribution of different mechanism to the
generation of diversity in Ig and TCR genes.
• V segments 85(heavy chain), 35(қ)
64(αTCR),67(βTCR)
• D segments 27(heavy chain), 0(қ)
0(αTCR),2(βTCR)
• N region diversifcation
V-D,D-J(heavy chain),None(қ)
V-J(αTCR),V-D,D-J(βTCR)
• J segments 6(heavy chain), 5(қ)
61(αTCR),4(βTCR)
• Total potential repertoire
~1011 (Ig), ~1016 (TCR)
Central and peripheral tolerance to self antigens.

Figure 11-2 Central and peripheral


tolerance to self antigens. Immature
lymphocytes specific for self antigens may
encounter these antigens in the generative
lymphoid organs and are deleted, change
their specificity (B cells only), or (in the
case of CD4+ T cells) develop into
regulatory lymphocytes (central
tolerance). Some self-reactive
lymphocytes may mature and enter
peripheral tissues and may be inactivated
or deleted by encounter with self antigens
in these tissues, or are suppressed by the
regulatory T cells (peripheral tolerance).
(Note that T cells recognize antigens
presented by antigen-presenting cells,
which are not shown.)

© 2005 Elsevier
FATES OF LYMPHOCYTES AFTER ENCOUNTER WITH ANTIGEN.

Figure 11-1 Fates of lymphocytes after encounter with antigens. In a normal immune response, microbes
stimulate the proliferation and differentiation of antigen-specific lymphocytes. (Microbial antigens are
typically recognized by lymphocytes in the presence of costimulators and innate immune responses,
which are not shown.) Self antigens may induce functional unresponsiveness or death of antigen-
specific lymphocytes or a change in the specificity of the receptors, making these cells incapable of
responding to the antigen (self-tolerance). Some antigens elicit no response (ignorance), but the
lymphocytes are able to respond to subsequent antigen challenge (not shown). This illustration depicts B
lymphocytes; the same general principles apply to T lymphocytes.

© 2005 Elsevier
Postulated mechanisms of autoimmunity

Figure 18-6 Postulated mechanisms of autoimmunity. In this proposed model of an organ-


specific T cell-mediated autoimmune disease, various genetic loci may confer
susceptibility to autoimmunity, in part by influencing the maintenance of self-tolerance.
Environmental triggers, such as infections and other inflammatory stimuli, promote the
influx of lymphocytes into tissues and the activation of self-reactive T cells, resulting in
tissue injury. Downloaded from: StudentConsult (on 20 November 2007 06:33 AM)
© 2005 Elsevier
Susceptibility loci for autoimmune diseases

Figure 18-7 Susceptibility loci for autoimmune diseases. The chromosomal loci associated with some
autoimmune diseases are shown. The location of candidate genes of immunologic interest are indicated
as ovals on the left of the chromosomes. These ovals are color coded to indicate the diseases to which
the genes are linked. SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus; AITD, autoimmune thyroid disease; RA,
rheumatoid arthritis; T1D, type 1 diabetes. (Modified from Yamada R and K Ymamoto. Recent findings on
genes associated with inflammatory diseases. Mutation Research 573:136-151, Copyright 2005 with
permission from Elsevier.)
© 2005 Elsevier
HLA link immunolgic Diseases
Disease HLA allele RR
• Rheumatoid Arthritis DR4 4
• Insulin-Dep Diabetes DR3 5
DR4 5
DR3/DR4 25
• Multiple sclerosis DR2 4
• SLE DR2/DR3 5
• Pemphigus vulgaris DR4 14
• Ankylosing Spondylitis B27 90-100
Postulated mechanisms of autoimmunity

Figure 18-6 Postulated mechanisms of autoimmunity. In this proposed model of an organ-


specific T cell-mediated autoimmune disease, various genetic loci may confer
susceptibility to autoimmunity, in part by influencing the maintenance of self-tolerance.
Environmental triggers, such as infections and other inflammatory stimuli, promote the
influx of lymphocytes into tissues and the activation of self-reactive T cells, resulting in
tissue injury. Downloaded from: StudentConsult (on 20 November 2007 06:33 AM)
© 2005 Elsevier
MECHANISM FOR BREAKING
B AND T CELL TOLERANCE

MOLECULAR MIMICRY

POLYCLONAL
B CELL ACTIVATION

POLYCLONAL
T CELL ACTIVATION

EXPOSURE OF “HIDDEN”
SELF ANTIGEN
THE ROLE OF INFECTION IN THE
DEVELOPMENT OF AUTOIMMUNITY :

MOLECULAR MIMICRY
IgD IgM Streptococcus
Antigen (epitop)

B
epitop on
Cross heart cells
Reaction
Streptococcus
antibody

Destruction of heart tissue

RHEUMATIC FEVER
B CELL TOLERANCE
SELF ANTIGENS

IgM IgD IgM

B Th B Th

Immature Mature

CLONAL ANERGY
Polyclonal activation
CLONAL DELETION

ACTIVATED CLONE

DEATH
AUTOIMMUNE
THE ROLE OF INFECTION IN THE
DEVELOPMENT OF AUTOIMMUNITY :

POLYCLONAL STIMULANT
LIPOPOLISACHARIDE (LPS)

IgD IgM IgD IgM Self Antigen


(heart,Kidney,
Insulin,Lung)
B Th B ANERGIZED B CELLS

Stimulatory signal
Cytokine ACTIVATED B CELLS
Anti heart Antibody
Anti kidney Antibody
Anti Insulin Antibody
Anti Lung Antibody
Anti LPS Antibody
THE ROLE OF INFECTION IN THE
DEVELOPMENT OF AUTOIMMUNITY :

POLYCLONAL STIMULANT

SUPERANTIGEN OF BACTERIA

IgD IgM Self Antigen


(heart,Kidney,
Insulin,Lung)
APC Th B ANERGIZED B CELLS

Stimulatory signal
Cytokine ACTIVATED B CELLS
Anti heart Antibody
Anti kidney Antibody
Anti Insulin Antibody
Anti Lung Antibody
Figure 18-8 Role of infections in the development of autoimmunity. A. Normally, encounter of a mature self-reactive T cell with a self antigen presented by a costimulator-
ROLE OF INFECTIONS IN THE
deficient resting tissue antigen-presenting cell (APC) results in peripheral tolerance by anergy. (Other possible mechanisms of self-tolerance are not shown.) B. Microbes
may activate the APCs to express costimulators, and when these APCs present self antigens, the self-reactive T cells are activated rather than rendered tolerant. C.

DEVELOPMENT OF AUTOIMMUNUTY
Some microbial antigens may cross-react with self antigens (molecular mimicry). Therefore, immune responses initiated by the microbes may activate T cells specific for
self antigens.

Downloaded from: StudentConsult (on 20 November 2007 06:33 AM)


© 2005 Elsevier
AUTOIMMUNE DISEASES

Rheumatoid Arthritis (antinuclear antibody)


Rheumatic Fever (antistreptococcus antibody)
Goiter(antibody against thyroid epithelial cells)
Diabetes Mellitus type I (antibody against
materials of cytoplasm/cell membrane of
pancreas β cell, cytotoxicity of T cell to β cell).
Chronic Thyroiditis (Hashimoto), (B and T cell
infiltration)
Scleroderma (antinuclear antibody)
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (Antinuclear
antibody, anti DNA antibody)
CONCLUSIONS
• All normal individuals are tolerant of their own
(self) antigens (self tolerance)
• Two mechanism of self tolerance are central
tolerance and peripheral tolerance
• Central tolerance consist of clonal deletion,
receptor editing (B cell) and Regulatory T cell.
• Peripheral tolerance consist of Clonal Anergy,
clonal deletion, and Regulatory T Cell.
• Autoimmune diseases result from the faillure of
self tolerance due to the activation of clonal
anergy or the lack function of Regulatory T cell.
• Multiple factors contribute to autoimmunity,
including immunologic abnormality,
susceptibility genes, and infections.

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