Title: BIOE 301 Lecture Eight
1BIOE 301 Lecture Eight
2BIOE 301 Lecture 8
- WARM-UP
- Observation Global average near-surface
atmospheric temperature rose 1.1
0.4 Fahrenheit in the 20th century. - What is the scientific approach to this?
- What is the engineering approach to it?
3Review of Lecture 7
- Science
- Science is the human activity of seeking natural
explanations for what we observe in the world
around us. - Five steps of the scientific method
- Engineering
- Systematic design, production and operation of
technical systems to meet practical human needs
under specified constraints - Six steps of the engineering design method
4Q3 How can technology solve health care
problems?
- CS1 Prevention of infectious disease
5Roadmap of CS 1
- Science
- Organisms that cause infectious disease
- Immunity
- Engineering
- How to make a vaccine
- Vaccines From idea to product
- Societal Impact
- Health and economics
- Ethics of clinical trials
- Developed world/Developing world
6Connections First day of class
- What caused the first bone marrow transplants to
be rejected by recipients?
7Bone Marrow - Pluripotent Stem Cells
- Hematopoietic stem cells differentiate into
- White blood cells
- Red blood cells
- Platelets
- Mesenchymal stem cells differentiate into
- Bone, cartilage, muscle
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9White Blood Cells
Neutrophil Lymphocyte Macrophage
The Defense The Good Guys
10Pathogens
The Offense The Bad Guys
11Types of Pathogens
- Bacteria
- Cells with membrane and cell wall (usually)
- Can survive outside host reproduce without host
- Can be killed or inhibited by antibiotics
- Viruses
- Nucleic acid core with protein envelope
- Use host intracellular machinery to reproduce
- Cannot be killed with antibiotics
- gt50 different viruses that can infect humans
12Question
- Based on your understanding of the
characteristics of bacteria, viruses, and blood
cells, identify which item best represents each
and be able to explain why you chose each. - Bacterium
- Virus
- Blood cell
13Pathogens
Human hair 100,000,000 nm
Red blood cell 7,000 nm
E. coli bacteria 800 nm
Virus 100 nm
www.awcommunity.org www.its.caltech.edu/boozer
14Bacteria
15How do Bacteria Cause Disease?
- Invade host
- Reproduce
- Produce toxins ? disturb cell function
- Examples
- Escherichia Coli
- Bacillus Anthracis
- Microbacterium tuberculosis
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
http//www.cubanology.com/Articles/Virus_vs_Bacter
ia.htm
16Virus
17How do Viruses Cause Disease?
- Virus invades host cell
- Binds to cell membrane receptors
- Endocytosis brings virus into cell
- Virus takes over cell
- Use viral nucleic acid and host cell resources to
make new viral nucleic acid and proteins - More virus is released from host cell
- Virus causes host cell to lyse OR
- Viral particles bud from host cell surface
18Virus examples Influenza, HIV, West Nile,
Hepatitis Human Papillomavirus, Viriola Major
19Using Viruses for Good, not Evil
- Gene Therapy infect cells with beneficial DNA
- Diabetes
- SCID
- Cancer
- Sickle cell anemia
- MS
- Cystic fibrosis
www.nih.gov
20Pathophysiology of HIV/AIDS
21Pathophysiology of HIV/AIDS
22The Immune System
- How Are We Protected Against Pathogens?
23Types of Immunity
- Three layers of immunity
- Physical Barriers
- Innate Immune System
- All animals possess
- Adaptive Immune System
- Vertebrates possess
- Keep pathogens out
- Kill them if they get in
24Types of Immunity - Defense
Line of scrimmage
Physical Barriers Defensive Line
Innate Secondary Defense
Adaptive Coach
25Types of Immunity
- Physical Barriers
- Skin (2 square meters)
- Mucous Membranes (400 square meters)
- Innate Immune System
- Produces general inflammatory response when
pathogens penetrate physical barriers - Adaptive Immune System
- Can adapt to defend against any invader
- Important when innate immune system cannot defend
against attack - Provides immune system with memory
26Physical Barriers
27What happens when you get a splinter?
28What happens when you get a splinter?
- Pathogens gets past physical barrier
- Macrophages eat bacteria on splinter
- Phagocytosis
- Activated macrophages produce chemicals which
- Increase local blood flow
- Increase permeability of
- blood vessels
- Recruit other phagocytes to site
Redness Heat
Swelling
Pus
29What happens when you get a splinter?
- Phagocytosis
- http//jcs.biologists.org/cgi/content/full/119/9/1
903/DC1
30 31Innate Immune System
- Primarily effective against pathogens outside of
cells - Two main weapons
- 1) Professional phagocytes
- Cells that eat stuff
- 2) The complement system
- Proteins that tag stuff for destruction
32Components of Innate Immune System
- 1) Macrophages
- Sentinels that patrol periphery
- If they find an invader, they
become activated - If activated, they
- Send signals to recruit other immune system cells
(Neutrophils) - Become vicious killers
- Present antigen to adaptive immune system (more
on this later)
33Components of Innate Immune System
- 2) Complement proteins
- Present in tissues blood
- Attach to surfaces of bacteria and viruses
- Target them for destruction by phagocytes
- Form Membrane Attack Complexes
- Recruit other immune cells from blood
34Adaptive Immune System
- Antibody-mediated
- Fight pathogens outside of cells
- Cell-mediated
- Fight pathogens inside of cells
35What is an antibody?
- Bridge between
- Pathogen
- Tool to kill it
- Antibodies have two important regions
- Fab region
- Binds antigen
- Binds surface of virus-infected cell
- Fc region
- Binds macrophages and neutrophils, induces
phagocytosis - Binds natural killer cell, induces killing
36Question
- Which components of your kit are most like
antibodies? - Arrange the components of the kit to demonstrate
how these antibodies bridge a pathogen and the
tool to kill it?
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38Antibodies
- How are antibodies made?
- B cells
- Lymphocytes that make antibodies
- Have B cell receptors on surface
- 100 million different types of B cells, each with
different surface receptors - B cell receptors are so diverse they can
recognize every organic molecule - When a B cell binds antigen
- Proliferates - In one week, clone of 20,000
identical B cells - Secretes antibody
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40Adaptive Immune System
- How do we kill virus once inside the cell?
- Antibodies cannot get to it
- Need T cells
- T Cells
- Recognize protein antigens
- When bind antigen, undergo clonal selection
- Three types of T Cells
- Killer T Cells (Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes CTLs)
- Helper T Cells (targeted by HIV)
- Regulatory T Cells
41How do T Cells ID Virus Infected Cells?
- Antigen Presentation
- All cells have MHC molecules on surface
- When virus invades cell, fragments of viral
protein are loaded onto MHC proteins - T Cells inspect MHC proteins and use this as a
signal to identify infected cells
42Question
- Using the components of the kit, demonstrate the
two steps required for viral antigens to be
presented on the MHC complexes on the surface of
the blood cell.
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44Question
- Demonstrate how the T cell can identify a virus
infected cell. - Why is this component of the adaptive immune
system a significant advance over the innate
immune system?
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46Immunologic Memory
- First time adaptive immune system is activated by
an antigen - Build up a clone of B cells and T cells
- Takes about a week
- After infection is over, most die off
- Some remain memory cells
- Second time adaptive immune system is activated
by that antigen - Memory cells are easier to activate
- Response is much faster no symptoms
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49Putting it all together
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52Putting it all together
Virus invades
Antibodies bind
Prevent virus function
Signal phagocytosis
Infects cells
Present antigen
Activates Killer T cells
Antigen presentation
Activates B cells
Kill infected cells!
Make more antibodies
53Antibody-mediated
Virus invades
Antibodies bind
Prevent virus function
Signal phagocytosis
Infects cells
Present antigen
Activates Killer T cells
Antigen presentation
Activates B cells
Kill infected cells!
Make more antibodies
Cell-mediated
54Summary of Lecture 8
- Pathogens Bacteria and Virus
- Levels of Immunity
- Barriers ? First line of defense
- Innate ? Inflammation
- Phagocytes
- Complement
- Adaptive ? Immunologic memory
- Cell mediated immunity ? Pathogens within cells
- Antibody mediated immunity
- Diversity to recognize 100 million antigens
55- Turn in HW 4 today
- Next Time
- Project Task 2 due on 2/8/07
- Influenza virus
- Vaccines
- The most cost-effective medical intervention
known to prevent death or disease
56For more info
- National Bone Marrow Program http//www.marrow.or
g/ - Baylor Center for Cell and Gene Therapy
- http//www.bcm.edu/genetherapy/
- Immunobiology BIOS 423 - Dr. Novotny