Title: Cell Mediated Immunity
1Immune team
Cell Mediated Immunity (CMI)
2Cell-Mediated Immunity (CMI)
3Cell Mediated Immunity
- Cell-mediated immunity (CMI).
- Remember -
- CD4 ( T helper ) is attracted to MHC II
- CD8 ( T cytotoxic ) is attracted to MHC I
- T cells (lymphocytes) bind to the surface of
other cells (Antigen Presenting Cells) that
display the antigen and trigger a response
MCQ
4Antigen Presenting cells that has MHC II
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Monocytes Peripheral blood Macrophages
Tissues Dendritic cells Lymphoid tissues
Langerhans cells Epidermis B-cells Lymphoid
tissue, Blood
5Lymphocyte
Macrophage
Lymphocyte
6Cell Mediated Immunity
The T helper cell need the help from ( antigen
presenting cell ) to recognize an antigen and
produce an effect against that antigen The APC (
antigen presenting cell ) hold the foregin
antigen in one hand , and hold its MHC class in
the other hand Then it present both his MHC
class and the foregin antigen to T helper cell in
the same time So T helper cell first recognize by
MHC II that this is a normal body cell , then it
recognize by the antigen that there is a foregin
antigen having fun in the body that need to
be killed so it produce a response against it
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6
2
5
3
4
Invariant chain(Ii)
8In The Previous Picture
In ( 1 ) you can see a foreign body in red color
havind a dark black part called the most
antigenic part and that what stimulate T cells In
( 2 ) the foreign body get endocytosed into an
endosome In ( 3 ) the endosome then fuse with the
lysosome to degrade the antigen into small parts
to separate the most antigenic part from the rest
of it In ( 4 ) the ER produce the MHC in vesicles
that fuse with the endosome In ( 5 ) the MHC
work as a hand that hold the most antigenic part
and present it to the T cell In ( 6 ) the MHC
and most antigenic part go to the surface of the
cell and do the presentation to T cell this
process happen in both MHC class I and II cells
9T cell ActivationAntigen Presentation
10T cell Activation Antigen Presentation
CD4 ( T helper ) is the brain of the immune
system All effector cells work under its command
11If the antigen wes intracellul-ar the ( CMI )
will work , but if the antigen wes extracellu-lar
the ( HI ) work
T lymphocytes
HI
CMI
Other cells
12In viral infections like ( HIV ) , because the
virus will inter the cell and force it to produce
endogenous proteins for the virus so the foreign
protein ( antigen ) come from inside the cell and
thats way it is called endogenous
1. Endogenous antigen
2. Exogenous antigen
Like microbes
13Virus
Target cell
14Target cell
15The virus can not make its own proteins (
antigens ) so it need a host cell to produce its
proteins ( endogenous antigens ) , the endogenous
antigen will bind with ( MHC I ) of the effected
cell and appear on the surface to be recognized
by CD8 ( T cytotoxic ) to kill it
Target cell
16Target cell
Host cell
Transcription Translation
Viral protein
17MCQ
Type of antigen
Type of MHC
Type of T cell
Exogenous
MHC II
CD4
Endogenous
MHC I
CD8
18Exogenous antigen like
Microbes Proteins
Cell-mediated immunity
19MCQ
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1
5
4
2
3
Invariant chain(Ii)
21TCR-MHC interaction
T cells
T cells
T cells
TCR
TCR
TCR
Y
X
X
MHC
MHC
MHC
APC
APC
APC
Recognition
No Recognition
1
2
3
22In the previous figure ( there is an interaction
between T cell receptor and MHC )
In ( 1 ) the MHC class is the right class for
that T cell receptor and the picked up part of
the foreign antigen is the most antigenic part ,
so there will be recognition and response to that
antigen In ( 2 ) the picked up part of the
antigen is the most antigenic part , but the MHC
class is not right for that T cell receptor , so
there will not be a recognition and of course no
response In ( 3 ) the MHC class is right for
that T cell receptor , but the picked up part of
the antigen is not the most antigenic part , so
no recognition and no response So to have a
recognition and response to an antigen by
effected cells you need ( the right type of MHC ,
the right part of antigen ) to the TCR
23CD4-MHC class II interaction
Antigen presenting cell
Antigen presenting cell
Antigen presenting cell
CD4
CD4
MHC class II
CD4
TCR
T cell
T cell
T cell
24Cell-Mediated Immunity
- Lymphocytes (B T lymphocytes)
- B lymphocytes ("B cells") These are responsible
for making antibodies (humoral immunity) - T lymphocytes ("T cells") CMI
- Subsets include
- CD8 cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) that kill
virus-infected and tumor cells - CD4 helper T cells enhance CMI and production of
antibodies by B cells
MCQ
25Cell-Mediated Immunity
- Examples of Cell-Mediated Immunity
- Delayed-Type Hypersensitivity (DTH) the
tuberculin test (or Mantoux test) - Tuberculosis a chronic disease, caused by
Mycobacterium tuberculosis - The response to tuberculin is called "delayed"
because cells take long time to arrive to site of
infection - in contrast to the "immediate" responses
characteristic of many antibody-mediated
sensitivities like an ( allergic response to a
bee sting) - So immediate hypersensitivity is mediated by
humoral immunity , but delayed hypersensitivity
and chronic diseases is mediated by cell mediated
immunity
26Cell Mediated Immunity
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- DTH is a cell-mediated response
- Anti-tuberculin antibodies are rarely found in
tuberculin-positive people - The T cells responsible for DTH are members of
the CD4 subset
27Cell-Mediated Immunity
- Contact Sensitivity
- Many people develop rashes on their skin
following contact with certain chemicals such as
nickel, certain dyes, and the active ingredient
of the poison ivy plant - The response takes some 24 hours to occur, and
like DTH, is triggered by CD4 T cells - The actual antigen is probably created by the
binding of the chemical to proteins in the skin - The fragments of antigen are then presented to
CD4 T cells by phagocytic cells in the skin by
antigen presentation
MCQ
28Activation of helper T cells
- Requires recognition of MHC - antigen complex on
the surface of antigen-presenting cells eg,
macrophages consisting of both antigen and class
II MHC proteins - Viral antigens are recognized in association with
class I MHC proteins - The activation of T cell in general by
interaction between MHC antigen complex and T
cell receptor is called MHC restriction
MCQ
29Cellular Basis of Immune Response
- To activate T helper cell and initiate a response
you need two signals ( 2 interactions ) - First signal
- Interaction between ( Class II MHC antigen )
with TCR - mediated by IL-1, LFA-1 with ICAM (
Inter-Cellular Adhesion Molecule 1) - Second signal (Co - stimulatory signal)
- Interaction between B7 on APC with CD28 on T
lymphocyte - The two reactions must happen to initiate the
immune response
MCQ
30T helper cell
CD28
TCR
antigen
B7
MHC
APC
31T cell Activation
- In the absence of co-stimulatory signal , state
of unresponsiveness called anergy develops - Production of co-stimulatory protein depends on
activation of the toll like receptor on antigen
presenting cell - Foreign antigens such as bacterial proteins
induce B7 protein where as self proteins do not
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32T cell Activation
- After antigen recognition by TCR, signal is
transmitted through CD3 molecule ( receptor ) - This results in influx of calcium into the cell
- Calcium activates calcineurin
- Calcineurin activates gene for IL-2 and its
receptor
33Out come of T helper cell activation
- Production of IL-2 and its receptor
- IL-2 is also know as T cell growth factor
- Proliferation of antigen specific T cells
- Effector and regulatory cells are produced along
with memory cells - IL-2 also stimulates CD8 cytotoxic cells
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T helper cell
Retain memory for different pathogens and
proliferate in later exposure to that pathogen
Produce cytokines and activate other cells
Proliferate
into
memory
effector
34Out come of T helper cell activation
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- Production of Gamma Interferon (IF?)
- ( IF? is an antiviral substance that will kill
cell infected by viruses and will make the cells
resistant to viruses so virus can not enter to
cells , ( used in hepatitis ) -
- It increases expression of Class II MHC proteins
- It enhances the ability of APC to present antigen
to T cells - It enhances the microbicidal activity of
macrophages - Enhances immune response
35Out come of T helper cell activation
- Memory T cells
- Respond rapidly for many years after initial
exposure to antigen - A large number of memory cells are produced so
that the secondary response is greater than the
primary - Memory cells live for many years and have the
capacity to multiply - They are activated by smaller amount of antigen
- They produce greater amounts of interleukins
36Effector functions of T cells
- Delayed type of hypersensitivity mediated by Th-1
type of CD4 positive cells - Cytotoxicity mediated by CD8 ve cells.
- Directed against virus infected cells, tumor
cells and allografts -
37Killing by cytotoxic cells
- Perforins ( a chemical makes wholes in cell
membrane - Granzymes degrading enzymes
- Fas-Fas Ligand interaction - apoptosis
- Antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity
- Immune surveillance
- Allograft rejection
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38The mechanism by which CD8 cell deal with cells
that have strange antigen on their surface is -
1- secrete perforin which is a peptide thats
make wholes in cell membrane 2- secrete enzymes
which lyse the cell membrane 3- secrete cytokines
like ( TNF ) which destroy cell membrane
39Killing Mechanisms of Cytotoxic T cells
perforin
enzymes
cytokines
40Activation of B cells
- B cell functions as APC
- Multivalent antigen binds to surface IgM
- Cross links adjacent Ig molecules
- Igs aggregate to form patches and migrate to
one pole to form a cap - Capped material is endocytosed
- Antigen is processed and epitopes appear on the
cell surface in association with Class II MHC
proteins
MCQ