Hypersensitivity Reactions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 77
About This Presentation
Title:

Hypersensitivity Reactions

Description:

Differentiate CD4 helper cell to TH1 cell. Induces IFN ? secretion by T cells & NK cell ... molecules (B7-1) & secretion of IL-12 to generate TH1 T cells ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1302
Avg rating:1.0/5.0
Slides: 78
Provided by: savitha3
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Hypersensitivity Reactions


1
Hypersensitivity Reactions
2
Type III ( Immune complex mediated)
Hypersensitivity
3
Type III ( Immune complex mediated)
Hypersensitivity
  • Ag Ab complexes produces tissue damage by
    eliciting inflammation at the site of deposition
  • Circulating immune complexes
  • In- situ immune complexes

4
Type III ( Immune complex mediated)
Hypersensitivity
  • Two types of Ag
  • Exogenous Ag
  • Foreign protein serum sickness
  • Bacteria post streptococcal GN
  • Virus - PAN
  • Endogenous Ag
  • Immunoglobulins Rheumatoid arthrits
  • Nuclear Ag - SLE

5
Type III ( Immune complex mediated)
Hypersensitivity
  • Systemic immune complex disease
  • local immune complex disease (Arthus reaction)

6
Systemic immune complex disease
  • Acute serum sickness
  • Foreign serum (horse antitetanus serum)
  • Fever, urticaria, arthralgia, lymphnode
    enlargement and proteinuria

7
Systemic immune complex disease
  • Pathogenesis 3 phases
  • Immune complex formation
  • Immune complex deposition
  • Immune complex mediated inflammation

8
(No Transcript)
9
Systemic immune complex disease
  • Factors affecting out come of immune complex
  • Size of immune complex
  • Functional status phagocytic system

10
(No Transcript)
11
Systemic immune complex disease
  • Factors affecting tissue deposition
  • Charge of immune complex
  • Affinity of Ag to various tissue component
  • Hemodynamic factors
  • Favoured sites glomeruli, joints, skin, small
    blood vessels

12
(No Transcript)
13
Systemic immune complex disease
  • immune complex elicit acute inflammatory reaction
  • Activation of complement cascade
  • Chemotactic factors, anphylotoxin,
  • Activation of neutrophil macrophages through
    their Fc receptor
  • Release of PG, vasodilator peptides, lysosomal
    enzymes oxygen free radicals
  • Platelet aggregation activation of Hageman
    factor - moicrothrombi

14
(No Transcript)
15
Systemic immune complex disease
  • Morphology
  • Acute necrotizing vasculitis - PAN
  • Glomerulonephritis lupus nephritis

16
(No Transcript)
17
(No Transcript)
18
(No Transcript)
19
Local immune complex disease (Arthus reaction)
  • Localized area of tissue necrosis resulting from
    acute immune complex vasculitis
  • Develop over few hours reaches peak 4-10 hours
    after injection
  • M/s fibrinoid necrosis of vessel

20
(No Transcript)
21
Type IV (Cell mediated) Hypersensitivity reaction
22
Type IV (Cell mediated) Hypersensitivity reaction
  • Intiated by specifically sensitized T lymphocytes
  • Immunological reaction to M.Tuberculosis, virus,
    fungi,protozoa parasite
  • Graft rejection
  • Contact dermatitis

23
Type IV (Cell mediated) Hypersensitivity reaction
  • Classic delayed type
  • Intiated by CD4 T cell
  • T cell mediated cytotoxicity
  • Intiated by CD8 T cell

24
Delayed type Hypersensitivity
  • Slowly developing inflammatory response
  • Tuberculin reaction
  • Protein lipopoysaccharide component of
    Tuberculous Bacilli
  • Reddening induration in 8- 12 hours and reach
    peak in 24-72 hours

25
(No Transcript)
26
(No Transcript)
27
Delayed type Hypersensitivity
  • Lymphocytes are replaced by macrophages over 2-3
    weeks
  • Epithelium like cells Epithelioid cells
  • Granulomatous inflammation

28
(No Transcript)
29
(No Transcript)
30
Delayed type Hypersensitivity
  • Cytokines
  • IL -12
  • IFN - ?
  • IL-2
  • TNF-a
  • IL -12
  • Differentiate CD4 helper cell to TH1 cell
  • Induces IFN ? secretion by T cells NK cell

31
Delayed type Hypersensitivity
  • IFN ?
  • Important mediator of Delayed type
    Hypersensitivity
  • Powerful activator of macrophages
  • Stimulate secretion of IL12
  • Express more class II molecule
  • ? capacity to kill microbes / tumour cells
  • Secretes PDGF TGF-ß ?stimulate fibroblast
    proliferation ? fibrosis

32
Delayed type Hypersensitivity
  • IL-2
  • Autocrine paracrine proliferation of T cells
  • TNF-a
  • Act on endothelial cells
  • ?Secretion of prostocyclin vasodilatation
  • ? Expression of E- selectin
  • Secretion of IL-8
  • Extravasation accumulation of lymphocyte
    macrophages at the site of reaction

33
(No Transcript)
34
T cell mediated cytotoxicity
  • Sensitized CD8 T cells kill antigen bearing
    target cells
  • CTL are directed against cell surface
    Histocompatibility antigens
  • Graft rejection
  • Resistance to virus infection
  • Tumour immunity tumour associated antigens

35
T cell mediated cytotoxicity
  • Two mechanism
  • Perforin granzyme dependent killing
  • Fas Fas ligand dependent killing

36
Transplant Rejection
37
Transplant rejection
  • Recipient immune system identify the graft/
    transplanted organ as foreign
  • Antigens responsible for Transplant rejection is
    HLA molecule
  • Any two individuals express 2 different HLA
    protein
  • Transplant rejection involves different types of
    Hypersensitivity reaction

38
Transplant rejection
  • Autograft Donor recipient is same individual
  • Isograft - Donor recipient is same genotype
  • Allograft - Donor recipient is of same species
    but different genotype
  • Xenograft Donar is different species from that
    of recipient
  • Skin, kidney, BM, heart, lung, liver, cornea

39
Transplant rejection
  • Rejection is a complex process in which both cell
    mediated immunity circulating Ab play a role
  • T cell mediated reaction
  • Antibody mediated reaction

40
Transplant rejection
  • T cell mediated reaction
  • CD4 helper cells mediate delayed
    hypersensitivity reaction
  • CD8 CTLS mediate graft cell destruction

41
(No Transcript)
42
Transplant rejection
  • Antibody mediated reaction
  • Exposure to class I class II HLA antigen evokes
    antibody production
  • Tissue damage Initial target is graft
    vasculature
  • Complement dependent cytotoxicity
  • ADCC
  • Immune complex mediated

43
Transplant rejection
  • Morphology underlying mechanism
  • Hyper acute rejection
  • Acute rejection
  • Chronic rejection

44
Hyper acute rejection
  • Within minutes/ hours after transplantation
  • Kidney cyanotic, flaccid excrete few drops of
    blood
  • Occurs in sensitized recipient preformed Ab in
    circulation
  • Ag-Ab complex deposited on vessel wall
    activation of complement (Arthus reaction)

45
Hyper acute rejection
  • Microscopy
  • Neutrophils in arterioles, glomeruli
    peritubular capillaries
  • Fibrin platelet thrombi
  • Vascular endothelial damage
  • Fibrinoid necrosis of arterial wall - Infarction

46
Acute rejection
  • Within few days in untreated patients
  • Sudden onset months/ years later, after
    immunosuppresion is terminated
  • cell mediated (acute cellular rejection)
  • Ab mediated injury (Acute rejection vasculitis)

47
Acute cellular rejection
  • ? Creatinine level followed by renal failure
  • Extensive interstitial mononuclear cell
    infiltration, edema haemorrhage
  • Focal tubular necrosis
  • Endothelitis
  • In the absence of arteritis- patients responds to
    immunosuppressive therapy

48
(No Transcript)
49
Acute rejection vasculitis
  • Mediated by Antidonor antibody
  • Necrotizing vasculitis
  • Marked thickening of intima by proliferating
    fibroblasts, myocyte foamy macrophages
  • infarction
  • renal cortical atrophy

50
(No Transcript)
51
Chronic rejection
  • Progressive raise in creatinine over 4-6 months
  • Vascular changes dense intimal fibrosis
  • Interstitial fibrosis
  • Tubular atrophy shrinkage of renal parenchyma
  • Interstitial infiltrate plasma cells,
    Eosinophils

52
(No Transcript)
53
Transplant rejection
  • Increased graft survival
  • Minimizing HLA disparity
  • Class I class II matching
  • Immunosuppresive therapy
  • Azathioprine, steroids, cyclosporine
  • Infections, EBV induced lymphoma, HPV induced
    squamous cell carcinoma, Kaposis sarcoma

54
Bone marrow Transplantation
  • Hematological malignancy
  • Aplastic anemia
  • Immunodeficiency
  • Major problems
  • Graft Versus Host (GVH) disease
  • Transplant rejection

55
Graft Versus Host (GVH) disease
  • Immunologically competent cells or their
    precursor are transplanted into immunologically
    crippled recipient
  • Bone marrow Transplantation
  • Liver transplant
  • Immunocompetent T cell derived from donor marrow
    recognizes recipient HLA as foreign react

56
Acute Graft Versus Host (GVH) disease
  • Occurs within days/ weeks of allogenic BMT
  • Mainly affects immune system, epithelia of
    skin, liver intestine
  • Infection CMV induced pneumonitis
  • Skin rashes, desquamation
  • Liver jaundice
  • Intestine ulceration, bloody diarrhea
  • Direct cytotoxicity by CD8 T cells cytokines
    released by donor T cells

57
Chronic Graft Versus Host (GVH) disease
  • Extensive cutaneous injury
  • Destruction of appendages
  • Dermal fibrosis
  • Cholestatic jaundice
  • Esophageal stricture
  • Recurrent infection
  • Depletion of donor T cells before transfusion
    eliminate GVHD

58
Autoimmune diseases
59
Autoimmune diseases
  • Immunity reaction against self antigen
  • Autoantibody directed against single organ/ cell
    type
  • Autoantibody directed against many tissue/ cell
    type

60
Autoimmune diseases
  • Autoantibody directed against single organ/ cell
    type
  • Hashimoto thyroiditis
  • Autoimmune hemolytic anemia
  • Autoimmune atrophic gastritis of pernicious
    anemia
  • Autoimmune encephalomyelitis
  • Autoimmune orchitis
  • Goodpasture syndrome
  • Autoimmune thrombocytopenia
  • Insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
  • Myasthenia gravis
  • Graves disease

61
Autoimmune diseases
  • Systemic Autoimmune disease
  • Systemic lupus erythematosus
  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Sjogren syndrome
  • Reiter syndrome
  • Possible
  • Inflammatory myopathies
  • Systemic scerosis
  • Polyarteritis nodosa

62
Autoimmune diseases
  • Three requirements
  • Presence of Autoimmune reaction
  • Autoimmune reaction should not be secondary to
    tissue damage but it is of primary pathogenetic
    significance
  • Absence of another well defined cause of the
    disease

63
Autoimmune diseases
  • Loss of self tolerance
  • Immunological tolerance
  • Is a state in which individual is incapable of
    developing an immune response to a specific
    antigen
  • Self tolerance
  • Lack of responsiveness to self antigen
  • Two mechanism
  • Central tolerance
  • Peripheral tolerance

64
Autoimmune diseases
  • Central tolerance
  • Clonal deletion of self reactive T B lymphocyte
    during their maturation in the central lymphoid
    organs
  • Developing T cells that expresses high affinity
    receptors for self antigens are deleted by
    apoptosis

65
(No Transcript)
66
Autoimmune diseases
  • Peripheral tolerance
  • Clonal deletion by activation induced cell death
  • Clonal anergy
  • Peripheral suppresion by T cells

67
Peripheral tolerance
  • Clonal deletion by activation induced cell death
  • Lymphocytes Fas(CD95)
  • Activated lymphocytes ligand for Fas (fas L)
  • Self Ag present in peripheral tissue causes
    persistent stimulation of self Ag specific T
    cells
  • Engagement of Fas by Fas ligand induces apoptosis
    of activated T cells

68
(No Transcript)
69
Peripheral tolerance
  • Clonal anergy Prolonged or irreversible
    functional inactivation of lymphocyte
  • Two signals are required for T cell activation
  • MHC associated peptide
  • CD28 must bind to their ligand (B7-1, B7-2)
  • Costimulatory molecules are not expressed /weekly
    expressed on most normal tissue

70
(No Transcript)
71
Peripheral tolerance
  • Peripheral suppression by T cells
  • CD4 T cells of TH2 type down regulate TH1
    response by secreting cytokines IL-4, IL-10
    TGF- ß

72
Autoimmune diseases
  • Defect / bypass in self tolerance result in
    Autoimmune diseases
  • Mechanisms
  • Immunologic
  • Genetic factors
  • Microbilogical agents

73
Autoimmune diseases
  • Failure of peripheral tolerance
  • Breakdown of T cell anergy
  • Failure of activation induced cell death
  • Failure of T cell mediated suppression
  • Molecular mimicry
  • Polyclonal lymphocytic activation
  • Release of sequestrated antigens
  • Exposure of cryptic self epitopic spreading

74
Autoimmune diseases
  • Breakdown of T cell anergy
  • Infection induced expression of costimulatory
    molecules (B7-1) secretion of IL-12 to generate
    TH1 T cells
  • Upregulation of B7-1 molecule is seen in CNS of
    Multiple Sclerosis and synovium of Rheumatoid
    arthritis

75
Autoimmune diseases
  • Failure of activation induced cell death
  • Defect in Fas Fas ligand mediated apoptosis
    result in proliferation of autoreactive T cells
  • Molecular mimicry
  • Some infectious agents share epitopes with self
    antigen
  • RHD Ab to streptococcal M protein cross react
    with cardiac glycoprotein

76
Autoimmune diseases
  • Polyclonal lymphocytic activation
  • Bacterial endotoxin can induce mouse lymphocytes
    to produce Anti DNA, Antithymocyte, Anti red
    cells antibodies in vitro
  • Release of sequestrated antigens
  • Spematozoa orchitis after vasectomy
  • Occular antigen- post traumatic uveitis

77
Autoimmune diseases
  • Exposure of cryptic self epitopic spreading
  • Each self antigen has many antigenic determinates
    (epitopes)
  • Cryptic self epitopes (masked antigens) can
    produce autoimmunity by proliferation of T cells
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com