Immune Response and Immunity: Envr 133 Mark D. Sobsey
Immune Response and Immunity: Envr 133 Mark D. Sobsey
Immune Response and Immunity: Envr 133 Mark D. Sobsey
Envr 133
Mark D. Sobsey
Antigens
Any foreign substance that elicits an immune
response when introduced into the tissues of a
susceptible animal and capable of combining
with the specific antibodies formed.
Generally high molecular weight
Typically, proteins or polysaccharides.
Polypeptides, lipids, nucleic acids and many
other materials also can also function as
antigens
Microbes are antigenic and they contain and
produce many antigens
Antigens have specific sites that bind to antibodies
called epitopes
Immunity and Immune Response
Self immunity
Some examples:
rheumatic fever
rheumatoid arthritis
ulcerative colitis
myasthenia gravis
Lyme disease (microbial etiology)
Guillan-Barre syndrome (microbial etiology)
Reiters syndrome or reactive arthritis (microbial etiology)
Insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) (microbial etiology?)
Interactions of the Components of The
Immune Response
T-cells, B-cells, and macrophages use MHC-II
receptors for presentation;
All other cells use MCH-I
(responsible for most of tissue graft rejection)
When a T-cell is presented with an antigen:
its receptor binds to the antigen and
it is stimulated to divide and produce helper T-cells
activate B-cells with bound antigen
suppressor T-cells
regulate the overall response
Cytotoxic "killer" T-cells
kill cells with antigen bound in MHC-I
Role of Immunity in Infections
Localized Infections:
Immunity to infection is usually short-term and transient
Mucosal (secretory or IgA) immunity in the gut or
respiratory tract wanes over time
Proof of concept: live, oral rotavirus vaccine:
immunity declines over time and reinfection with wild
type rotaviruses occurs
Repeated localized (e.g., gastrointestinal) re-infection is
possible. Examples:
Viruses: rotaviruses, noroviruses, adenoviruses and some
enteroviruses.
Salmonella spp, Shigella spp., Campylobacter spp, and E. coli spp.
cause localized infections
Giardia lamblia and Cryptosporidium parvum
Role of Immunity in Infections:
Generalized/Systemic/Disseminated Infections
Immunity against generalized/systemic/disseminated
infection is usually lifelong, unless immune system is
severely compromised
Localized (e.g., gastrointestinal) re-infection is possible
Hepatitis A and E and many enteroviruses are viruses
causing systemic/generalized/disseminated infections
Salmonella typhi is a bacterium causing systemic infection
Typically, immunity against severe illness is long-term and
probably lifelong
Proof of concept: live, oral poliovirus vaccine and poliomyelitis
eradication; susceptibles are newborns and infants
Antigenic changes in microbes may overcome long-term
immunity and increase risks of re-infection or illness
Role of Selection of New Microbial Strains in
Susceptibility to Infection and Illness
Antigenic changes in microbes overcome immunity,
increasing risks of re-infection or illness
Antigenically different strains of microbes appear and are
selected for over time and space
Constant selection of new strains (by antigenic shift and drift)
Partly driven by herd immunity and genetic recombination,
reassortment , bacterial conjugation, bacteriophage infection
and point mutations
Antigenic Shift:
Major change in virus genetic composition by gene substitution
or replacement (e.g., reassortment)
Antigenic Drift:
Minor changes in virus genetic composition, often by mutation
involving specific codons in existing genes (point mutations)
A single point mutation can greatly alter microbial
virulence