Title: Chapter 4 Antigen
1Chapter 4 Antigen
2- Definitions of antigen
- Antigen non-self substances which can
combine with TCR or BCR or Ab and have the
potential of inducing immune response . - Antigen
- Tolerogen an antigen that induces
immunological tolerance - Allergen an antigen that elicits an
immediate hypersensitivity.
3- Section I
- Properties of Antigens and factors affecting
immunogenicity
4 I. Properties of Ag
- Immunogenicity
- An ability of antigen which can stimulate one
individual to evoke a specific immune response
(Ab or effector T cells). -
- Immunoreactivity (Antigenicity)
- An ability of antigen which can combine
specifically with corresponding Ab or effector
T lymphocyte.
5Ag B cells Ab
T cells effective T cells
Immunogenicity
Immunoreactivity
6- Hapten and carrier
- Hapten Only possess immunoreactivity
- Carrier enhance the immunogenicity of hapten
- Complete antigen possess both functions
- Hapten carrier ----complete antigen
7II Factors of influencing immunogenicity
- 1. Factors related to antigens
- 1)Foreignness
- Non-self substances means substances which
never contact with embryonic lymphocytes
according to Burnets theory. - Xeno-substances (Various pathogens and their
products, xeno-protein, etc.) - Allo-substances (ABO blood type, HLA, et al)
- Self components
- - degeneration
- - release of sequester antigen
- - forbidden clone rejuvenate
8Burnet Clonal selection theory
Various clones
Clone deletion
birth
Clone selection
92. Certain physical and chemical properties
- Molecular weight
- Reasonable large molecule( gt10.0 kd)
- more stabilization
- more surface structures for lymphocytes to
recognize
10- 2) chemical composition and structure
- Proteins gtPolysaccharides gtNucleic Acids gtLipids
- aromatic ring
- ring gt linear
- 3) physical nature
- polymer gt monomer
- Particulate gt Soluble
- Denatured gt Native
11II. Factors related to host
- 1. Inheritance (Species, Individual)
- 2. Age,Sex and healthy condition
12III) Methods of immunity
- 1. Dosage of antigen, times of injection
-
- 2. Ways (subcutaneousgtintravenousgtoral)
- 3. Adjuvant
- Certain substance which can enhance the Ir or
change the type of Ir
13Section II. Specificity and cross reaction of
antigen
- Specificity and antigenic determinants
- Exist in both immunogenecity and
immunoreactivity - The basis of immunologic diagnosis and
immunologic therapy
14Specificity of Ag
152.Antigenic determinant
- 1)Antigen determinants (epitope) are small
particular chemical groups existing in antigen
which can be recognized by TCR/BCR or Ab. - Polypeptide antigen----5-23 amino acid residues
- Polysaccharide antigen----5-7 monosaccharides
- Nuclear acid antigen----6-8 nucleotides
16- Epitope decide the specificity of the antigen
- a subtle change of antigenic determinant
(characteristics, number and conformation) can
influence the specificity of Ag. -
- Antigen determinant is the combining site of Ag
to Ab
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18The chemical component , arrangement and
conformation affect the specificity of antigen
19- 2) Antigenic valence
- Total number of determinants which can be bound
by antibody or antigenic receptor of lymphocytes
is called antigenic valence. - Most natural antigens are polyvalence
antigen. - Hapen is monovalence antigen.
20II. Classification of antigenic determinant
- 1. According to the site and structure of Ag
determinants -
- Conformational determinants
-
- Sequential (or linear) determinants
-
21Conformational determinants
- Conformational determinants are formed by amino
acid residues that arent in a sequence but
become spatially juxtaposed in the folded protein - .
- They are normally exist on the surface of antigen
molecules. - They are recognized by B cells or antibody.
22Sequential (or linear) determinants
- Epitopes formed by several adjacent amino acid
residues are called linear determinants. - They are exist on the surface of antigen
molecules or inside molecules. - They are mainly recognized by T cells, but some
also can be recognized by B cells.
23- 2. According to types of cells recognizing
antigenic determinants - T cell determinants(T cell epitopes)
- B cell determinants(B cell epitopes)
- Functional determinants
- Hidden or Sequestered determinants
24T cell determinant
- Antigenic Determinants recognized by T
cells(TCR) - Composition
- Peptides
- Sequential determinants(Exist in anywhere of Ag)
- Processed
- MHC presentation
- Size
- 8 -23 residues
25B cell Determinant
- 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 by B cells
- No MHC
- Size 5-7 residues
26B cell determinants
- Functional determinant epitope existed on the
surface of Ag which can be recognized by BCR or
combined with Ab easily. - Hidden determinant epitope existed inside of Ag
which can not be recognized by BCR or combined
with Ab easily.
27Comparison T cell epitope and B cell epitope
-
T cell epitope B cell
epitope - Structure linear epitope
conformational epitope -
or linear epitope - Receptor TCR
BCR - Nature proteins
proteins, polysaccharides - Size 5-23 amino acid residues
5-15 amino acid residues -
or 5-7 monosaccharides -
or 5-8 nucleotides - Position any position in antigen mostly
exist on the surface of -
antigen - MHC molecules yes
no
- Presentation
-
-
28III. Common antigen and cross reaction
- Common antigen the same or similar determinants
among various antigens are called common antigen. - Cross reaction
- The antibodies induced by one kind of antigen
can react with other antigen because of presence
of common determinant between two antigens
292
2
A
1
B
3
Anti-2
Anti-2
Anti-A
Anti-B
Anti-1
Anti-3
30- Mechanism of cross reaction
- ---common Ag determinants
- ---similar structure of Ag determinants
- Significance
- Because 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 . - In clinic, existence of cross reaction may
lead to wrong diagnosis.
31Section III. Classification of Ag
- I. Classification according to immunogenicity
- of the antigens
- Complete Ag
- Hapten
32 II. according to whether need the help of T
cells when B cells produce Ab
- 1. TD-Ag (thymus dependent Ag ) TD-Ag can
stimulate B cells to produce Ab with - the help of T cells
- 2. TI-Ag (thymus independent Ag) stimulate B
cells to produce Ab without the help of T cell
and M? -
33- 1. TD-Ag (thymus dependent Ag ) TD-Ag can
stimulate B cells to produce Ab only with - the help of T cells
- ---most of TD-Ag are protein
- ----more kinds of determinants, less number of
each kind - ---stimulate B cell to produce IgG, IgM, IgA
- ---capable of inducing CMI
- ---immune memory
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36- 2. TI-Ag (thymus independent Ag) stimulate B
cells to produce Ab without the help of T cell
and M? - ---most are polysaccharide
- ---there is more same repeat determinants
- ---only induce B cell to produce IgM
- ---can not induce CMI
- ---no memory
37Antigen
TI-Ag
38- III according to origin of antigens
- xenoantigen
- alloantigen
- autoantigen
39Section IV. Important Ags in medicine
- I. Pathogens and their products
- 1.Pathogens Surface antigen Vi Ag
- Somatic Ag O Ag
- Flagellar Ag H Ag
- Pillus Ag
40- 2. Exotoxin and toxoid
- Exotoxin
- Produced by G bacteria
- Strong immunogenicity and pathogenicity
- Toxoid
- exotoxin which losses its toxicity and
maintains its immunogenicity under suitable
conditions - Tetanus toxoid
41- II. Immune serum of animal
- animal serum contains Abs
- Antibody activation bind to antigen
- Immunogenicity hypersensitivity
- TAT Tetanus anti-toxin
42- III. Heterophilic Ag (forssman Ag)
- ----common Ags are shared by different
species - no specificity of species
- Such as
- Forssman Ag SRBC and guinea pig organs
- Heart or kidney of human and streptococcus
- O14 of E. coli and colonic mucos
- Ox19 of proteus and R. typhi
- -- Significance immunopathology
- Diagnosis
43 IV. Alloantigen
- 1.Antigen of red blood cell (blood typing)
- ABO system
- -very important in transfusion
- Rh system (in Chinese gt99 Rh)
- ---heamolytic disease of the newborn(HDNB)
- 2. Human leukocyte antigen, HLA system
- -relate to transplantation
- -very important in immune regulation
44V. Autoantigen
- 1. Release of sequestered Ag
- 2. Modification of protein
45VI. Tumor antigen
- Tumor specific Ag, TSA
- --only express on the tumor cells but on normal
cells - Tumor associated Ag,TAA
- -- Express highly on tumor cells but lowly on
normal cells, eg. AFP CEA
46Section V. Superantigen and adjuvant
- 1. Superantigen (SAg) Substance that can
non-specifically stimulate polyclonal T/B cells
and induce a very strong immune response with a
extremely low concentration -
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48The mechanism of SAg is different from that of
Ags.
Superantigen
MHC
Antigen
TCR
49- T cell SAg
- enterotoxin
- B cell SAg
- SPA (staphylococcal protein A)
- HIVgp120
50Biological actions of superantigen
- 1. activate immune response
- 2. Immune suppression
- 3. induce immune tolerance
51 52- Adjuvant ----Adjuvant is certain substance which
can enhance the Ir or change the type of Ir when
it is injected before or together with the
antigens -
- Common adjuvants
- Incomplete Freunds adjuvant
- complete Freunds adjuvant
53- Classification of adjuvant
- organic adjuvants BCG
- inorganic adjuvants Al(OH)3
- synthesized adjuvants polyIC
- complex adjuvants
54- Mechanisms of adjuvant
- change the chemical and physical characters of Ag
- improves the Ag process and presentation ability
of macrophages - stimulates proliferation of lymphocytes
55What you should know by the end of this lecture
- Definition and characteristics of antigen
- Definition of antigenic determinants,conformationa
l determinants and linear determinants - Difference between T cell epitopes and B cell
epitopes - Definition of common antigen and cross reaction
- Difference between TD-Ag and TI-Ag
- How can you classify different Ag?
- what is TSA,TAA, hetreophilic Ag, superantigen ?
- Important antigens in medicine