1 / 42

Immunoglobulins, immune response

Immunoglobulins, immune response. Martin Liška. 1. The structure of immunoglobulins. 2. Isotypes. (in principle) classes of antibodies distinguished on the basis of H chain structure differences 5 types: m (IgM), d (IgD), g (IgG), a (IgA) and e (IgE)

zeroun
Download Presentation

Immunoglobulins, immune response

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Immunoglobulins, immune response Martin Liška

  2. 1. The structure of immunoglobulins

  3. 2. Isotypes • (in principle) classes of antibodies distinguished on the basis of H chain structure differences • 5 types: m (IgM), d (IgD), g (IgG), a (IgA) and e (IgE) • in addition, we can distinguish subtypes of antibodies within some classes (IgG, IgA) based on their H chain differences

  4. 3. Domains and their biological function • in principle: domains of V regions form a recognizing unit and domains of C regions determine secondary biological functions of antibody (i.e. biological half life, distribution in the body, binding complement, binding to cells through Fc-receptor)

  5. 4. Variable region of Ig molecule • hypervariable loops are concentrated at the spikes of variable regions where antigen binding sites are localized • the binding site specificity is determined by aminoacid sequences and both by morphology and shape of the loop

  6. 5. The biological features of distinct Ig classes IgG • the most abundant serum Ig • the most important Ig of secondary immune response • the only Ig which passes through the placenta • the main opsonizing Ig • activates complement via classical pathway • biological half life 21 day

  7. IgA • found both in serum and seromucinous secretions • defense of mucosa • opsonization • does not activate complement

  8. IgM • in pentamer form is found in serum; in monomer form is bound on membrane of B cells • prevailing antibody of primary immune response • high-effective agglutinant and cytolytic agent • usually isohaemagglutinins and natural antibodies

  9. the best classical way complement activator • does not bind phagocytes Fc receptor, but substantially enhances phagocytosis through complement activation • biological half life 6 days

  10. IgD • free form in serum, boundon B cells membrane • antigen receptor on B cells

  11. IgE • in normal conditions low amounts in serum • mainly bound on mast cells (binds through FceR) • anti-helminth defense • immediate type allergic reactions

  12. Ig subclasses • differences in H chain structure and biological properties • IgG1 a IgG3 participate in defence against viral and bacterial protein antigens • IgG2 ensures defence against antigens which does not require help from T lymphocytes

  13. 6. Allotypic and idiotypic variations • allotypes = allelic variants of isotypes • idiotypes = structural determinants localized in variable region having connection with the ability of antigen binding • idiotopes = epitopes in variable region (idiotype is the sum of idiotopes) • anti-idiotypic antibodies = in principle reflect the antigen

  14. 7. Genetic basis of Ig production a/ L chains genes K chain – genes located on chromosome 2 - V, J and C segments • chain – encoded in similar complex of genes on chromosome 22

  15. b/ genes encoding H chain • more complicated • localized on chromosome 14 • V, D, J, C segments (genes encoding individual segments contain more regions compared with L chains) • during completion of V/D/J exon, gene rearrangement occurs

  16. Development of B lymphocytes Lymphoid progenitor → pro-B cells During maturation from pro-B cells into pre-B cells: Ig genes of the heavy chain recombine; pre-B cells express pre-BCR During maturation from pre-B cells into B cells: Ig genes of the light chain recombine Immature B cells express membrane IgM Mature B cells express membrane IgM and IgD = BCR and are able to respond to antigen in peripheral lymphoid tissues

  17. Mechanisms contributing to antibody diversity: • chance recombinations • imprecise joining of V, D, J genes • N-region additions • extensive mutations involving variable-region genes after antigen exposure

  18. Isotype switching • during the immune response, plasma cells switch from producing IgM to IgG or to another Ig class (IgA, IgE) • the switch involves a change in the H-chain constant domains (CH) • no change in antigen-binding specificity ! (no alteration in the L chain or in the variable portion of H chain)

  19. Allelic exclusion • once the process of rearrangement on one of chromosomes is successful, then all attempts on second chromosome are stopped • the same rule governs both for H- and L-chains • every single B cell produces only one type of H- and one type of L-chain

  20. Clonal restriction • each B cell expresses identical copies of an antibody that is specific for single epitope • when a B cell divides, the chromosomes in its progeny cells bear the selected allelic genes, and these genes do not undergo any further V/J or V/D/J rearrangements • immunoglobulins produced by given B cell and its progeny are identical in epitope specificity and in k- or l-chain isotype

  21. Clonal expansion • proliferation of lymphocytes activated by reaction with an antigen • all lymphocytes of generated clone have the identical antigenic specificity

  22. Monoclonal antibodies • immunoglobulins arising from a single clone of B cells, or more precisely cells artificially created by hybridisation of B lymphocytes of specific antigenic specificity (= produced Ig have the same antigenic specificity) with tumor cell (= cells are „immortal“)

  23. The utilization of monoclonal antibodies: • Diagnostics (flow cytometry, ELISA, autoantibodies etc.) • Treatment (anti-IgE, anti-TNF-a, anti-CD3)

  24. Humoral immune response • The recognition of antigen by specific Ig on the surface of naive B lymphocyte • The binding of antigen cross-links Ig receptors of specific B cells and then activation signals are delivered inside the B cell; the necessary second signal is provided by a breakdown product of the complement protein C3 • Clonal expansion of B cell and secretion of low levels of IgM

  25. Humoral immune response • Protein antigens activate antigen-specific T helper cells which stimulate B cell; antigen presentation of these antigens to T helper cells is required • T helper cells exprime CD40L on their surface and secrete cytokines → proliferation and differentiation of antigen-specific B cells, isotype switching • Affinity maturation = affinity of antibodies for protein antigens increases with prolonged or repeated exposure to the antigens (B cells migrate into follicles and form germinal centers → proliferate rapidly and their Ig V genes undergo extensive somatic mutations; at the same time, the antigen complexed with secreted antibody is displayed by FDC → B cells that recognize the antigen with high affinity are selected to survive)

  26. Phases of humoral immune responses

  27. Primary immune response • First antigen exposure • The amounts of antibody produced is smaller 2 types of antigens: • T-dependent – help from antigen-specific T helper cells is required; protein antigens • T-independent – antibody production is induced directly, without the involvement of T helper cells; typically polysaccharides, lipids

  28. Secondary immune response • Subsequent antigen exposure • Higher amount of antibodies is produced • With protein antigens, secondary responses show increased isotype switching and affinity maturation (= production of antibodies with increased affinity to antigen) • Memory cells involvement

  29. Affinity and avidity of antibodies • affinity = the strength of the binding between a single binding site of a molecule (e.g.antibody) and a ligand • avidity = expresses the strength of interaction of polyvalent antibody with a polyvalent antigen

  30. Ontogenesis of immune response a/ prenatal

  31. Hematopoiesis • Mesoblast – from 2nd (3rd) week of gestation • Liver – from 6th (8th) week of gestation, in liver hematopoiesis persists whole prenatal period • Bone marrow – from 10th (12th) week of g., from 20th week the main organ of hematopoiesis

  32. T lymphocytes • Precursors from week 7, from week 8-9 lymphocytes move into thyme, where they differentiate • TCR gene segments rearrangement, expression of TCR on the surface of T lymphocytes • Selection

  33. B lymphocytes • Precursors from day 8 • Fetal B lymphocytes express IgM on their surface • Synthesis of specific antibodies start at week 20-24, but IgA+M levels are in fact undetectable, IgG production starts after birth

  34. Monocytes-macrophages • Macrophages can be detected by week 3-4 • Mature monocytes appear by month 5 in fetal circulation

  35. Neutrophils • Mature cells are detectable from week 12-14

  36. Postnatal B lymphocytes • relative counts decrease after the birth • respond to immunization presumably by IgM production, switching to other isotypes is slower • slow increase of child’s own IgG connected with decrease of maternal IgG levels (by month 3-6) • IgM reaches levels common i adults at the age of 1-3 yr., IgG+A between the age of 10-15 yr. • Humoral response to polysaccharide antigen arises by the age of 2 yr.

  37. T lymphocytes • More than 90% are naive, but their numbers decrease in adult age • Proliferation under mitogen stimulation similar to adults X response to specific antigens only after contact with them • Lower cytotoxic activity of T lymphocytes

  38. Innate imunity • Newborns´phagocytes have generally decreased functional ability, activity of NK-cells is decreased • Decreased total complement activity (concentration of its compounds is of 35-70% of adults)

  39. c/ Old age • decreased cytotoxicity of NK-cells and macrophages • decreased resistance against viral infections, decreased anti-tumour immunity • switching from Th1 to Th2 • weaker humoral response under new stimuli • increased production of autoantibodies

More Related