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Tolerance

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Tolerance And Autoimmune Diseases Tolerence * It is a specific immunologic unresponsiveness i.e. the absence of specific ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tolerance


1
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2
  • Tolerance
  • And
  • Autoimmune Diseases

3
Tolerence
  • It is a specific immunologic unresponsiveness
  • i.e. the absence of specific immunoresponses
    to a particular antigen in a fully
    immunocomptent person
  • Unresponsiveness to self antigens is known as
    auto tolerance
  • Both B-cells and T-cells participate in
    tolerence
  • But T-cells play the primary role

4
Central Tolerance
  • Clonaldeletion
  • The process by which T-cells acquire the
    ability to distinguish self from non self, in
    fetal thymus
  • This involves the killing of T-cells that react
    against antigens present in the fetus at that time

5
Peripheral Tolerance
  • T-cell tolerance (clonal anergy)
  • Some self-reactive T cells are not killed in
    thymus
  • Functional inactivation of surviving
    self-reactive T cells

6
Tolerance
  • B-cells become tolerant to self by two
    mechanisms
  • 1) Clonal deletion
  • Probably while B-cell precursors are in bon
    marrow
  • 2) Clonal anergy
  • B cells in the periphery
  • Tolerance in B-cells is less complete than in
    T-cells
  • The most autoimmune diseases are mediated by
    antibodies

7
Factors Influencing The Induction Tolerance
  • 1) Immunologic maturity of the host
  • Neonates are immunologically immature and
    well
  • accept allograft that would be rejected by
    mature host
  • 2) Structure and dose of antigen
  • a- Simple molecules induce tolerance more
    readily than
  • complex ones
  • b- Very high and very low doses of antigen may
    result
  • in tolerance

8
Factors Influencing The Induction Tolerance
  • 3) T-cells become tolerant more readily and
    remain
  • tolerant longer than B-cells
  • 4) The continuous presence of antigen helps to
  • maintain tolerance
  • 5) Administration of immunosuppressive drugs
    enhances tolerance as in transplantation

9
Clinical Importance of Tolerance
  • 1) Organ transplantation
  • Introduction of tolerance may help in
    prevention of rejection
  • 2) Tumor development
  • Tolerance to tumor antigen results in growth
    of the
  • tumor without being detected by the immune
    mechanisms
  • 3) Autoimmune disorders
  • Disturbance of self-tolerance results in
    autoimmune disease

10
  • Autoimmune Diseases

11
Autoimmune Diseases
  • Autoimmune diseases occur due to breakdown of
    the mechanisms that maintain auto tolerance
  • Auto-antibodies and self reactive T-cells are
    produced, resulting in tissue damage by several
    mechanisms

12
Etiology Of Autoimmune Diseases
  • 1) Genetic predisposition
  • - Familial incidence of autoimmune diseases
  • - Most of them appear to be associated with
    certain
  • MHC genes, specially MHC II genes
  • e.g. Rheumatoid arthritis is associated with
    DR4
  • Thyroditis with DR5
  • Multiple sclerosis with DR2
  • SLE with DR2/DR3
  • Type I diabetes with DR3/DR4
  • Ankylosing spondylitis with B27

13
Rheumatoid Arthritis
14
Etiology Of Autoimmune Diseases
  • 2) Exposure to infectious antigens that cross
    react
  • with self antigens
  • - An immune response to these antigen will
    result
  • in immune attack against self antigens
  • e.g. Antibodies against M protein of
    Streptococcus pyogens may react with heart valves
    and cause Rheumatic fever
  • 3) Alteration of self antigens or the appearance
    of new antigens under the effect of drugs,
    chemicals, or viral infections
  • 4) Hormonal influences play a role e.g. SLE
    affects women 10 times more than men

15
Mechanisms Of Disease Production
  • The disease may be organ specific
  • e.g Hashimoto thyroditis
  • The disease may be systemic
  • e.g. SLE or rheumatoid arthritis
  • 1) Binding of an autoantibody to host cells
    result in complement fixation and tissue
    destruction
  • e.g. Haemolytic anemia (Type II
    hypersensitivity)

16
Mechanisms Of Disease Production
  • 2) Formation of immune complexes and their
  • deposition in tissues, joints, kidney and
    skin
  • The immune complexes fix complement resulting
    in
  • tissue damage
  • e.g. SLE and rheumatoid arthritis (Type III
    hyper.)
  • 3) DTH reactions (Type IV)) due to auto reactive
    T-cells
  • e.g. Ulcerative colitis, multiple sclerosis
    and
  • type I diabetes

17
Laboratory Diagnosis
  • 1- There is elevated serum immunoglobulins
  • 2- Complement levels may be decreased
  • 3- Immune complexe detected in serum or organ
    biopsy
  • 4- Auto antibodies can be detected in serum
  • e.g. anti-nuclear, anti-smooth muscles, Rh
    factor
  • and anti-mitochondrial Ab
  • 5- Testing for antibodies specific to particular
    Ag,
  • involved in organ specific diseases
    (anti-thyroid Ab)

18
  • Thanks
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