Mechanisms of immune evasion

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Transcript Mechanisms of immune evasion

Immunity to microbes

(mechanisms of defense against viral, parasitic and fungal infections)

Goal

To understand basic principles of defense against infections induced by: bacteria - extracellular - intracellular viruses parasites - protozoa - helmints fungi

Viruses

Simple structure (subcellular level) Obligate intracellular agents - unable to replicate outside cells - enter cells via receptors Induce diseases through - damage of cells in which they replicate - induction of immune response Infections - acute - chronic (active and latent)

Mechanisms of defense against viruses

Mechanisms of innate immunity

- inhibition of infection and induction of antiviral state type I interferons (IFN-α and β) - killing of infected cells (NK cells)

Antiviral action of type I interferons Uninfected cells Expression of enzimes that inhibit viral replication Expression of class I MHC molecules Infected cells Protection from infection Killing of infected cells by CTLs

Destruction of infected cells by NK cells

Destruction of infected cells by NK cells

Destruction of infected cells by NK cells

Mechanisms of defense against viruses

Mechanisms of adaptive immunity

Humoral immunity B cells and antibodies - neutralization (IgG and IgA), ADCC (IgG) and opsonization (IgG) Cell-mediated immunity

Neutralization of viruses

Protective mechanisms of antibodies

Mechanisms of defense against viruses

Mechanisms of adaptive immunity

Humoral immunity B cells and antibodies - neutralization (IgG and IgA), ADCC (IgG) and opsonization (IgG) Cell-mediated immunity CD8 + and CD4 + T cells - killing of infected cells (CD8 + T cells) - activation of CD8 + T cells and and B cells (CD4 + helper T cells)

Mechanism of killing by CTLs

Mechanism of killing by CTLs

Mechanism of killing by CTLs

Mechanism of killing by CTLs

Mechanism of killing by CTLs

Mechanism of killing by CTLs

CD8 + CTL perforin granzymes Target cell apoptosis

Mechanism of killing by CTLs

CD8 + CTL FasL Fas apoptosis Target cell

Mechanisms of innate and adaptive immunity against viruses

Mechanisms of defense against viruses

Mechanisms of immune evasion

- antigenic variation (influenza virus, HIV...)

Antigenic variations of influenza virus

Mechanisms of defense against viruses

Mechanisms of immune evasion

- antigenic variation (influenza virus, HIV...) - inhibition of antigen processing and presentation (many viruses)

Inhibition of antigen processing and presentation by viruses

Mechanisms of defense against viruses

Mechanisms of immune evasion

- antigenic variation (influenza virus, HIV...) - inhibition of antigen processing and presentation (many viruses) - inhibition of immune response (many viruses)

Inhibition of immune response through production of virokines and viroreceptors

Mechanisms of defense against viruses

Mechanisms of immune evasion

- antigenic variation (influenza virus, HIV...) - inhibition of antigen processing and presentation (many viruses) - inhibition of immune response (many viruses) - infection of immune cells (HIV...) - establishment of latency (HSV, HIV...) - inhibition of apoptosis (Herpes and Pox viruses...)

Mechanisms of defense against viruses

Injurious effects of immune response

- tissue damage due to CD8 + CTL activity (HBV...) - immune complexes formation (HBV...) - „molecular mimicry” (many viruses and various autoimmune diseases)

Parasites

- complex eukaryotic organisms - most common infectious diseases (30% of world population) - complex life cycles - protozoa (unicellular) – intra- and extracellular agents - helmints (multicellular warms) – extracellular agents - often induce chronic infections - constant exposure (endemic areas) - direct exposure or via vectors - need for vaccines (immunoparasitology)

Mechanisms of defense against parasites

Mehanisms of innate immunity

Protozoa and helmints – mostly resistant - complement and phagocytosis (protozoa) - eosinophils and macrophages (helmints)

Mechanisms of defense against parasites

Mehanisms of adaptive immunity

Protozoa B-cells, CD4 + T H 1 and CD8 + T cells - antibodies (B-cells) – Entamoeba sp., Plasmodium sp. -IFN-γ production and macrophage stimulation (CD4 + T H 1 cells) - Leishmania sp.

- cytotoxicity (CD8 + T cells) – Plasmodium sp.

Helmints B-cells and CD4 + T H 2 cells - stimulation of B-cells to produce IgE (IL-4) - stimulation of eosinophils (IL-5 and IgE) - degranulation of mast cells (IgE)

Immunity against helmints (T H 2 response)

Immunity against helmints (function of eosinophils)

Mechanisms of defense against parasites

Injurious effect of immune response

- granuloma formation and fibrosis (Schistosoma sp.) - immune complex formation (Plasmodium sp.)

Mechanisms of immune evasion

- existence of different forms/stages (Plasmodium sp...) - alteration of surface antigens (Trypanosoma sp....) - complement resistance (many parasites) -“concealing” – cysts (Toxoplasma sp.), residence in gut (intestinal parasites)

Fungi

- extracellular agents (some survive phagocytosis) - yeast (unicellular) - molds (multicellular) - local and systemic mycoses - most systemic infection - opportunistic some endemic (dimorphic fungi) - risk factor - immunodeficiency (neutropenia)

Mechanisms of defanse against fungi

Mechanisms of innate immunity

Fungi – mostly susceptible - phagocytosis (neutrophils) - complement

Mechanisms of adaptive immunity

Cell-mediated immunity - macrophage and neutrophil activation (CD4 + T H 1 and T H 17 cells)

Injurious effect of immune response

- granuloma formation and fibrosis (Histoplasma capsulatum)

Mechanisms of immune evasion

- inhibition of phagocytosis (C. neoformans...)

Thanks for your attention!

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