Title: Immunogen
1Definitions
- Immunogen
- Antigen (Ag)
- Immunogenicity
- An ability of antigen which can stimulate the
body to evoke a specific immune response (Ab or
effect T cells). - Â
- Antigenicity (Immunoreactivity)
- An ability of antigen which can combine with
corresponding Ab or
sensitized T lymphocyte.
2- Antigen non-self substances which can combine
with TCR or BCR or Ab and have the potential of
inducing immune response . - Antigen
- Tolerogen
- Allergen
3Factors Influencing ImmunogenicityContribution
of the Immunogen
- Foreignness
- 1. Non-self substances
- 2. self component
- degeneration release of sequester antigen, eg,
sperm, brain tissue, et al. - According to Burnnet, Foreignness means
substances which never contact with embronic
lymphocytes.
4- Foreignness
- Size (Molecule weight)
- reasonable large molecule( gt10.0 kd) has good
immuogenecity. - - more stationary
- - more surface structure for lymphocyte to
recognize - hapten and carrier
- hapten
- substances which can combine with Ab, but
cannot induce immune response independently. In
another word, hapten only possess
immunoreactivity. - carrier
- enhance the immunogenicity of hapten complete
antigen - Hapten Carrier complete antigen
5- Chemical nature Complexity
- - ring gt linear
- - ProteinsgtPolysaccharides gtNucleic Acids gtLipids
- Some glycolipids and phosopholipids can be
immunogenic for T cells and illicit a
cell mediated immune response. - Physical Form
- Particulate gt Soluble
- Polymer gt Monomer
- Denatured gt Native
- Degradability
- More deradability More
immunogenicity - Ag processing by Ag Presenting Cells (APC)
6- Genetics
- Species
- Responders vs Non-responders
- MHC molecules
- Individual
- Age, health, etc.
- Dose Times
- Route
- Subcutaneous gt Intravenous gt Intragastric
- Adjuvant
- Substances that enhance an immune response to an
Ag or change the type of immune response when it
is injected before or together with the antigens.
7- Classification of adjuvants
- - biological adjuvant BCG, LPS
- - synthesized adjuvant Incomplete Freunds
adjuvant, - complete
Freunds adjuvant - - chemical adjuvant Aluminium Salts
- Mechanisms of adjuvants
- - change the chemical and physical charactes of
Ag like halflife increase. - - improves the Ag process and presentation
ability of macrophages. - - stimulates proliferation of lymphocytes via
induction of costimulatory molecules. - - increase in inflammation responses.
8Antigenic determinant
- Antigen determiants (epitope)
- - are small particular chemical groups of
antigen which decide the specificity of the
antigen. It is actually the combining site of Ag
and Ab. - - a subtle change of antigenic determinant
(characteristics, number and conformation) can
influence the specificity of Ag. - Antigenic valence
- total number of determinant which can be combined
with Ab.
9- Commom antigen Cross reaction
-
- - different Ag own the same epitope or their
epitope have similar structure,these epitopes are
called common antigen. - - reaction between the same Ab and different Ag
with same similar determiants. - mechanism of cross reaction
- --- common Ag determinant (toxin toxoid)
- --- similar structure of Ag determinant (there
are some common antigen determinants between
different microbes, so the antiserum against one
kind of Ag can also react with another Ag and
cause a cross reaction)
10Cross-reactive recognition for alloreactivityDiff
erences in MHC molecule expression between a
donor and a recipient are said to be allogenic,
provoking alloreactions that cause graft
rejection..
Immune response to foreign antigens
Acute response to the graft expressing allogeneic
MHC
11Classification of Antigenic determinant
- 1. Sequential Conformational determinant
- Sequential (or linear ) determinant
- --- determinants composed of continuous residues
- --- primary Structure
- --- exist in any where of Ag
- --- recognized by T cell or B cell
- Conformational determinant
- --- determinants composed of discontinuous
residues by conformation - --- secondary, tertiary quarternary Structures
- --- exist on the surface of Ag
- --- recognized by B cell
12B
B/T
active
degradation
13- 2. Functional Sequester determinants
- Functional determinate or Immunodominant groups
(IDG) epitope existed on the surface of Ag which
can be recognized by BCR or combined with Ab
easily. - Sequester determinant
- epitope existed inside of Ag which can not be
recognized by BCR or combined with Ab easily.
143. B cell epitopes and T cell epitopes
- B cell epitope
- - Antigenic Determinants Recognized by B cells
and Ab - - Composition peptide, polysaccharides, nucleic
acids - - Sequential determinants or Conformational
determinants (existed on the surface of Ag) - - Recognized directly (No MHC)
- - Size 5-7 residues
- T cell epitope
- - Antigenic Determinants recognized by T
cells(TCR) - - CompositionPeptides
- - Sequential determinants (Exist in anywhere of
Ag) - - Recognized indirectly (Processed and MHC
presentated) - - Size 8 -17 residues
15Classification of Antigens
1. T-independent T-dependent Antigens
- T-independent
- - Polysaccharides Pneumococcal polysaccharide,
lipopolysaccharide, Flagella
- - Polymeric structure
- - Polyclonal B cell activation
- Yes -Type 1 (TI-1)
- No - Type 2 (TI-2)
- - Resistance to degradation
- T-dependent
- - Proteinsmicrobial, non-self or altered-self
proteins
16- 2. According to relative xenogenic, allogenic,
autogenic antigen - Xenogenic antigen
- Ags comes from another species Microbial Ag
- Allogenic antigen
- Ags comes from different individuals of the same
species - - antigen of red blood cell (ABO system, Rh
system) - - Human leukocyte antigen, HLA system
- Autogenic antigen
- Ags comes from self body
- - Release of sequestered Ag
- - Degeneration of protein
- - Tumor antigen
- Heterophile Ag (forssman Ag)
- common Ags are shared by different species (no
specificity of species) -
-
173. Superantigen
- Antigens that can non-specifically stimulate a
plenty of T/B cells and induce a very strong
Immune respose with a extremely low concentration
- Staphylococcalenterotoxins, Streptococcal
pyrogenic exotoxins, staphylococcal protein A,
HIVgp120
Monoclonal/Oligoclonal T cell response. 1104 -
1105
184. Mitogens
- Mitogens are agents that are able to induce cell
division (mitosis)Â in a high percentage of T or
B cells. This proliferation is described as
polyclonal activation (as opposed to clonal
expansion following the specific encounter with a
conventional immunogen). There are T cell
mitogens and B cell mitogens. - A number of common mitogens are lectins. Lectins
are proteins which bind to specific carbohydrate
groups (moieties). They bind to glycoproteins on
the surface of the lymphocytes and cause
activation. But they do not act via conventional
TcR-epitope or Ig-epitope interactions. Lectin
Examples Con A PHA (T cell mitogen), PWM (T
and B cell mitogen) - Another important mitogen which is NOT a lectin
is LPS (lipopolysaccharide). This polysaccharide
component of the outer membrane of gram negative
bacteria is also known as endotoxin. - LPS is a very potent mitogen for B cells.