Title: The innate immune response
1The innate immune response
2Levels of Defence
- Organisms must continually defend themselves
against pathogens of many kinds - A variety of defence mechanisms have evolved to
increase the chances of survival in the face of
these external challenges - Defence mechanisms operate at all levels
external and internal, and involve molecules,
cells and organ systems.
3Non-specifc Defences
- Non-specific defences are found in all organisms.
- They are non-specific because they protect
against a wide variety of pathogenic organisms. - They are innate meaning that they are always
present and are not produced by prior contacts
with a pathogen.
4Invertebrate Defences
- Invertebrate animals have only innate
non-specific defence mechanisms. - They may respond to any foreign material
(including a parasite) by producing a capsule of
connective tissue around the material. Within
the capsule, phagocytic cells may ingest the
invader. - Some species of crustaceans produce broad
spectrum bacteriocidal agents in response to
infection by bacteria. - Both these reactions require the ability to
recognise and reject non-self materials, but it
is not known how this occurs in inverterbrates.
5Plant Defences
- Like animals, plants have both molecular and
cell-mediated defences, and are able to
distinguish self from non-self. - Unlike other organisms, plants have no
circulatory system or wandering phagocytic cells
so each cell must fend for itself. - Cell wall is first line of defence it provides
a physical barrier against pathogens.
6Plant Defences
- Secondary substances these are chemicals
produced by plants, e.g. - Antibiotics to protect against bacterial and
fungal infections - Protease enzymes that disrupt the digestive
functions of herbivores - Cellulases and chitinases that kill fungal cells
by digesting their cell walls - Ecdysome insect moulting hormone. Disrupts the
hormonal balance of parasitic insect larvae - Specific examples from textbook include the toxic
compounds produced by Eucalypt leaves and the
cytotoxic chemicals produced by some species of
Acacia - Cell mediated defences can involve
self-destruction of infected or damaged cells. - Isolation and encapsulation are also important
mechanisms for defending against plant parasites
such as fungi, nematodes, bacteria, viruses and
insects.
7The immune system has evolved to protect
eukaryotes from microbes
Parasite in red blood cell
Bacteria
SARS virus
Fungus
8Us and them self and non-self
- Microorganisms protozoans, bacteria, viruses,
helminths (worms) all express unique molecules
(proteins, carbohydrates and lipids) that
distinguish them from other species. - These molecular differences are the basis by
which the immune system discriminates microbes
from self components.
9Recognition of Self and Non-self
- Some microbial molecules are shared with us.
- Some microbial molecules are unique to microbes
but are shared within discrete taxonomic groups
e.g. LPS in gram negative bacteria. These shared
molecules are called PAMPs (pathogen associated
molecular patterns). - Some microbial molecules are unique to a
particular organism e.g. those displayed by one
strain of influenza virus but not another strain.
- Unique molecules that can be recognised by the
immune system are called antigens. - The immune system has separate sets of receptors
for recognising shared and unique molecular
patterns that are distinct from self molecules.
10Markers of self
Every cell in your body carries the same set of
distinctive surface proteins that distinguish you
as self. This set of unique markers on human
cells is called the major histocompatibility
complex (MHC) proteins. There are two classes
MHC Class I proteins, which are on all cells, and
MHC Class II proteins, which are only on certain
specialized cells.
11Markers of non-self
Bacteria
SARS virus
Epitope
Antigen
Antibody
Non-self leukocyte
Non-self nerve cell
Antigen
Epitope Class I MHC protein
Antibody
12Markers of self Major Histocompatibility Complex
Antigenic peptide
Antigenic peptide
Antigenic peptide
Viral infection
MHC Class II
MHC Class I
MHC Class I
Antigen-presenting cell uses MHC Class I or II
Infected cell
Cell membrane
Your immune cells recognize major
histocompatibility complex proteins (MHC) when
they distinguish between self and non-self. An
MHC protein serves as a recognizable scaffold
that presents pieces (peptides) of a foreign
protein (antigenic) to immune cells.
13Requirements for an effective defence against
pathogens
- Response should not harm the host recognition
of pathogen presence by recognition of non-self - Should be present as soon as exposure to
pathogens occurs (i.e. at birth) - Response must be rapid (pathogens can replicate
rapidly) - Response must be appropriate for the pathogen
(pathogens vary in size, environment, etc) - These features evolved early in the development
of life on Earth and are displayed by the innate
immune system.
14Outcome of the response to microbial invasion by
the innate defences
- Innate defences remove or control invading
microbes thus infection resolves - OR
- The microorganism persists and replicates
because some microbes have evolved to overcome
the defences of the innate immune system. These
are pathogens. - Additional effector mechanisms are required to
remove pathogens - These are provided by the more recently evolved
adaptive (specific, acquired, cognate) immune
system
15What is immunity?
- Protection and resistance from infection by
microrganisms. - Innate and adaptive immunity have overlapping but
distinctly different roles in this process.
16Where are immune defences required?
- Sites of microbial infection and normal flora
- Skin
- Nose and mouth
- Respiratory tract
- Eye
- Scratch, injury
- Circulation
- Urogenital tract
- Anus
17Interactions with microbes
- Not all microorganisms cause disease some
microbes colonise their host and aid normal body
functions. - Suppression of the immune system allows microbes
that are normally harmless to become pathogenic
opportunistic infections. - Some microbes have evolved to evade the innate
immune system (pathogens) so the adaptive immune
system developed later in evolution.
18Innate Immune System
- The innate immune system controls the early
stages of infection. - Characteristics
- Relatively non-specific receptor molecules on
cells and in serum recognise PAMPS - Rapid because components already present
- Magnitude constant
- Acts as a first line of defence (sentinel
function) - Comprises
- Physical barriers
- Biochemical barriers
- Serum factors (complement, cytokines etc)
- Cells (neutrophils, macrophages, NK cells, other)
19Physical and biochemical barriers of innate
immunity
- Physical barriers prevent microbial entry.
- Biochemical barriers control pathogen growth.
- Normal flora compete with potential pathogens.
- Skin barrier. Sweat (acidic pH)
- Clotting also helps protect skin
- Lysozyme enzyme in saliva, sweat, tears.
Attacks bacterial cell walls - Mucous (respiratory, digestive, urinary
reproductive tracts) traps pathogens - Cilia little hairs that help clear mucous (and
pathogens) from respiratory tract - Alimentary canal lysozyme in saliva, stomach
HCl kills many pathogens, specialised immune
areas in the GI tract, very high turnover of
epithelial cells, antibodies - Movement e.g. peristalsis, cough reflex, blinking
20Soluble factors the complement system
- The complement system (complement) is a group of
plasma proteins which interacts with pathogens to
mark them for killing. - The proteins are activated sequentially in a
cascade. - Multiple triggering events activate the cascade,
e.g. - Binding certain PAMPs on microbial surfaces.
- Binding antibodies which have bound microbial
surfaces (associated with the adaptive immune
response). - Outcomes
- Migration of phagocytes to site of infection.
- Phagocytosis of microbes.
- Lysis of some microbes.
21Complement
C2
C3a
C3
C7
C5a
C1
C8
C6
C5b
IgG
C5b
Enzyme
C5
C3b
C4
Antigen
C9
22Other soluble factors
- Cytokines (including interferons)
- Small glycoproteins released by body cells a s a
means of communicating with the immune system - Coordinate many aspects of the immune response
- Usually act locally and only remain active for a
short time - Cytokines act on target cells by attaching to a
cytokine receptor in the membrane, which sends a
signal to the nucleus changing the behaviour of
the cell - Different cytokines trigger a variety of
responses, both non-specific and specific e.g.
they promote growth and proliferation of
lymphocytes, induce fever, promote antibody
responses, activate macrophages - Interferons
- Set of proteins produced by virally infected
cells to limit the spread of viral infections, by
inducing a state of resistance in healthy cells. - Induced by viruses, bacteria and other signals
from the immune system
23Cells of theinnate immune response
- Phagocytic white blood cells (leukocytes)
attracted to a site of infection (chemotaxis) by
chemicals released by injured cells. - Three types
- neutrophils (short lived)
- monocytes (short-lived..in blood)
- macrophages (long-lived..in tissue)
- Cytotoxic cells eosinophil and natural killer
(NK cells) - Inflammatory cells basophil, polymorphonuclear
granulocytes - All are derived from pluripotent stem cells in
bone marrow. - All induce inflammation.
24Phagocytes and Granulocytes
- Some immune cells have more than one name
- Phagocytes are large immune cells that can
engulf and digest foreign invaders - Granulocytes refers to immune cells that carry
granules laden with killer chemicals.
25Phagocytes
- Phagocytes include
- Monocytes circulate in the blood
- Macrophages are found in tissues throughout the
body - Dendritic cells are more stationary, monitoring
their environment from one spot such as the skin - Neutrophils are cells that circulate in the
blood but move into tissues when they are needed.
- Macrophages are versatile cells besides acting
as phagocytic scavengers, they secrete a wide
variety of signaling cytokines (called monokines)
that are vital to the immune response.
26Phagocytes and their relatives
Monocyte
Eosinophil
Mast cell
Dendritic cell
Macrophage
Neutrophil
- Functions of Phagocytes
- Enter an infected site from the circulation
- Bind, engulf and kill a wide variety of microbial
agents - Produce immunomodulatory substances e.g.
cytokines, chemokines, which regulate the immune
response - Act as first line of defence against infection
Basophil
27Phagocytes in the body
Brain microglial cells
Lungalveolar macrophages
Liver Kupffer cells
Spleen macrophages
Kidneymesangial phagocytes
Blood monocytes
Lymph node resident and recirculating macrophages
Precursors in bone marrow
Jointsynovial A cells
28Phagocyte killing mechanisms
- Acidification pH 3.5-4.0
- Antimicrobial peptides defensins, cationic
proteins - Enzymes lysozyme, acid hydrolases
- Competitors lactoferrin
- Toxic nitrogen intermediates nitric oxide
- Toxic oxygen intermediates O2-, H2O2, OH, OCl
29Granulocytes
- Neutrophils are both phagocytes and granulocytes
they contain granules filled with potent
chemicals. These chemicals, in addition to
destroying microorganisms, play a key role in
acute inflammatory reactions. - Other types of granulocytes are
- Eosinophils and basophils these degranulate by
spraying their chemicals onto harmful cells or
microbes. - Mast cells are twins of the basophil, except
they are not a blood cells. They release
granules containing inflammatory mediators to
augment the action of immune cells and are
responsible for allergy symptoms in the lungs,
skin, and linings of the nose and intestinal
tract. - Blood platelets are cell fragments. These
fragments contain granules which promote blood
clotting and wound repair, and activate some
immune defenses.
30Cytotoxic cells
- Target infected or altered cells, and release
granules whose contents are toxic. -
- These include
- Natural killer (NK) cells (kill tumours, virus
infected cells) - Eosinophils (kill parasites)
- Macrophages (release cytotoxic mediators)
31Protective processes
- Inflammation
- Infected cells (mast cells) release histamine,
which is a vasodilator. - Causes localised swelling, redness, heat, pain.
Can also cause high temperature. - Brings white cells to the area of infection
- Phagocytes that invade damaged tissue do their
work, and are removed by programmed cell death - Resolvins (derived from omega-3 fatty acids) are
a group of naturally occurring substances that
have been identified as signalling molecules
involved in dampening down the inflammatory
response
32Protective Processes
- Preventing blood loss
- Any injury that damages blood vessels is
potentially very dangerous, so very efficient
mechanisms have evolved to prevent the loss of
blood - Small arteries constrict in the area around the
wound to reduce the amount of blood escaping from
damaged vessels (this involves a nervous
response) - Blood platelets become sticky and fragile. They
clump together to plug the broken part of the
vessel. - Blood coagulates (clots) as a result of a series
of chemical reactions triggered by the damage to
cells and the release of platelet contents.
Soluble blood proteins are converted into
insoluble protein fibres which entangle blood
cells and slowly shrink, forming a a more
permanent seal over the wound. - New tissue grows to permanently heal the wound.
33Protective Processes
- Fever
- Fever is an increase in body temperature
resulting from a resetting of the body
temperature set-point in the hypothalamus of the
brain to a higher level. Temperatures above
37.8oC are regarded as fever. - Fever can be triggered by bacterial toxins called
pyrogens acting directly on the brain or by
cytokines released from macrophages stimulated by
the presence of bacterial substances. - Bacteria that infect humans grow best at 37oC so
fever reduces the growth rate of most bacteria. - Moderate increases in temperature increase enzyme
activity, so fever often improves many aspects of
the inflammatory response. -