Title: Lecture 19 Host Defense Against Infection
1Lecture 19Host Defense Against Infection
- Innate immunity
- Adaptive Immunity
2Response to Initial Infection
3Stages of Response to Infection
4Course of Typical Acute Infection
5Innate Host Defense Mechanisms
- Anatomic Factors
- Mechanical Factors
- Biochemical Factors
6Skin
- Stratified and cornified epithelium provides a
mechanical barrier - Indigenous microbiota competes with pathogens
- Acid pH inhibits growth of disease producing
bacteria - Bactericidal long chain fatty acids in sebaceous
gland secretions
7Respiratory Tract
- Upper Respiratory Tract
- Nasal hairs induce turbulence
- Mucous secretions trap particles
- Mucous stream to the base of tongue where
material is swallowed - Nasal secretions contain antimicrobial substances
- Upper respiratory tract contains large resident
flora - Lower Respiratory Tract
- Particles trapped on mucous membranes of bronchi
and bronchioles - Beating action of cilia causes mucociliary
stream to flow up into the pharynx where it is
swallowed - 90 of particles removed this way. Only smallest
particles (lt10µ in diameter) reach alveoli - Alveoli
- Alveolar macrophage rapidly phagocytize small
particles
8Alimentary Tract
- General defense mechanisms
- Mucous secretions
- Integrity of of mucosal epithelium
- Peristaltic motions of the gut propel contents
downward - Secretory antibody and phagocytic cells
- Stomach
- Generally sterile due to low pH
- Small Intestine
- Upper portion contains few bacteria
- As distal end of ilieum is reached flora
increases - Colon
- Enormous numbers of microorganisms
- 50-60 of fecal dry weight is bacteria
9Genitourinary Tract
- Male
- No bacteria above urethrovesicular junction
- Frequent flushing action of urine
- Bactericidal substances from prostatic fluid
- pH of urine
- Bladder mucosal cells may be phagocytic
- Urinary sIgA
- Female (Vagina)
- Large microbial population (lactobacilli)
- Microorganisms produce low pH due to breakdown of
glycogen produced by mucosal cells
10Eye
- Flushing action of tears which drain through the
lacrimal duct and deposit bacteria in nasopharynx - Tears contain a high concentration of lysozyme
(effective against gram positive microorganisms
11Innate Immune Recognition
- All multicellular organisms are able to recognize
and eliminate pathogens - Despite their extreme heterogeneity, pathogens
share highly conserved molecules, called
pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) - Host cells do not share PAMPs with pathogens
- PAMPs are recognized by innate immune recognition
receptors called pattern-recognition
molecules/receptors (PRMs/PRRs)
12Three Functional Classes of PRRs/PRMs
- Endocytic receptors
- Macrophage mannose receptor
- Macrophage scavenger receptor (SR)
- Integrin CD11bCD18
- Secreted proteins
- Mannose-binding protein/lectin
- Pulmonary surfactant proteins A and D
- C-reactive protein (CRP)
- Signaling receptors
- Toll receptor family
13Endogenous Signals Induced by PAMPs
- Mediate inflammatory cytokines
- Interleukin-1 (IL-1)
- IL-6
- Tumor necrosis factor (TNF-a)
- Type 1 interferon (INF-I)
- Major effector cytokines
- Chemokines
- Antigen-presenting cells recognize PAMPs
- Same APC processes pathogens into specific
pathogen-derived antigens and presents them with
MHC encoded receptors to T-cells - T-cell responds only when presented with both
signals - Different Effector Cytokines in Response to
Different Pathogens (Th1 vs. Th2)
14Antimicrobial Peptides/Defensins
- Four hundred peptides described to date
- Defensins (3- 5-kD, four families in eukaryotes)
- a-defensins (neutrophils and intestinal Paneth
cells) - b-defensins (epithelial cells)
- Insect defensins
- Plant defensins
- Defensins appear to act by binding to outer
membrane of bacteria, resulting in increased
membrane permeability. - May also play a role in inflammation and wound
repair
15Complement System
- Three pathways now known
- Classical
- Alternative
- Lectin or MBL pathway (binding to
mannose-containing carbohydrates) - Host cells have complement regulatory proteins on
their surface that protect them from spontaneous
activation of C3 molecules
16Inflammatory Mediators in Innate Immunity
- Cytokines secreted by phagocytes in response to
infection include - IL-1
- activates vascular endothelium and lymphocytes
- Increases adhesiveness of leukocytes
- IL-6
- Induces B-cell terminal maturation into
Ig-producing plasma cells - IL-8
- Induces expression of b2 integrin adhesion
molecules on neutrophils, leading to neutrophil
migration to infection site - IL-12
- Activates NK cells and induces Th1-cell
differentiation - IL-18
- TNF-a
- Activates vascular endothelium and increases
vascular permeability, leading to accumulation of
Ig and complement in infected tissues
17Other Mediators and Molecules
- Phagocytes
- Toxic oxygen radicals
- Peroxides
- Nitric oxide (NO)
- Lipid mediators of inflammation
- Prostaglandins
- LTB4
- Platelet activating factor
- Complement component C5a
- Stimulates mast cells to release histamine,
serotonin and LTB4 - IL-1, IL-6 and TNF-a
- Induce acute-phase response in liver
- Induce fever
- IL-1 and IL-18 signaling pathways activate NF-kB,
important in innate immunity
18Immune Cells and Innate Immunity
- Phagocytes
- Neutrophils
- Moncyte/macrophage
- Eosinophils (to a lesser extent)
- NK cells (large granular lymphocytes)
- Antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity
(ADCC) - Have two major functions
- Lysis of target cells
- Production of cytokines (IFN-g and TNF-a)
- Act against intracellular pathogens
- Herpesviruses
- Leishmania
- Listeria monocytogenes
- Act against protozoa
- Toxoplasma
- Trypanasoma
19Immune Cells and Innate Immunity (contd)
- g/d T cells
- Two types of T cell receptors
- One composed of a and b chains (basic T cell
antigen receptor) - One composed of g and d chains (minor population
of T cells) - Two groups of g/d T cells
- One group found in lymphoid tissues
- One group located in paracellular space between
epithelial cells - Recognizes unprocessed target antigen in absence
of APC help - B-1 cells (minor fraction of B cells, do not
require T-cell help) - Mast cells
- Located in serosa, under epithelial surfaces and
adjacent to blood vessels, nerves and glands - Capable of phagocytosis
- Process and present antigen using MHC class I or
II receptors - LPS can directly induce release of mast cell
mediators - Complement (C3a and C5a) induce mast cells to
release mediators - Chemotaxis, complement activation, inflammation
- TNF-a secreted by mast cells results in
neutrophil influx into infected site
20Summary of Innate Immunity
- External and mechanical barriers
- Receptors for pathogen motifs
- Soluble antimicrobial proteins
- Pattern of cytokines produced influences adaptive
response
21Adaptive Immunity and Infection
22Protective Role of Antibodies Against Pathogens
- Toxin neutralization
- Opsonization/enhancement of phagocytosis
- Sensitization for killing by NK cells
- Sensitization of mast cells
- Activation of complement system
23Toxin Neutralization
24Diseases caused by bacterial toxins
25Preventing Bacterial Adherence
26Virus-blocking Antibodies
27Activation of the Complement Cascade
- Cell Activation (anaphylatoxins)
- Activate inflammatory cells
- Induce smooth muscle contraction and blood vessel
permeability - Cytolysis ("membrane attack complexes)
- Loss of cell membrane integrity
- Opsonization
- Complement receptors on phagocytic cells
- Renders cells vulnerable to phagocytosis
28Fc Receptors
29Opsonization and Immune Adherence
- C3B (C4B)
- Facilitates adherence of bacteria, viruses and
neutrophils to monocytes and macrophages - Facilitates ingestion of certain bacteria by
neutrophils and monocytes - Facilitates ingestion by activated macrophages
- Augments mediated phagocytosis and IgG-mediated
cell cytotoxicity (ADCC) - Antibody
- antibody may opsonize by itself, or bridge
phagocyte and target cell, enhancing complement
immune adherence
30Chemotaxis
capillary blood vessel
phagocyte
endothelium
basement membrane
Site of inflammation, tissue damage and immune
reactions
PAVEMENTING
C5a
DIAPEDESIS
CHEMOTAXIS
31Phagocytosis
32Bactericidal Agents in Phagocytic Cells
33Natural Killer Cells and Antibody-Dependent
Cell-Mediated Cytotoxicity (ADCC)
34Inflammation
The four cardinal signs of inflammation
(Cornelius Celsus, 30 BC to AD 38) rubor et
tumor cum calore et dolore redness and swelling
with heat and pain
- Increased blood supply to the infected area
- Increased capillary permeability
- Migration of leukocytes into tissues (Chemotaxis)