BL - Immunopathology Type II Autoimmunity Flashcards

1
Q

Type II Immunopathology definition

A

Pathology due to IgG, IgM or IgA causing harm to self (autoreactive Abs); a normal self protein becomes and antigen and the immune system mounts an immune response to it

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2
Q

5 examples of Type II disease mechanisms

A
  1. Myasthenia gravis
  2. Rheumatic heart disease
  3. Dressler’s Syndrome
  4. Goodpasture disease
  5. Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
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3
Q

Type II immunopathology in heart

A

1) ‘Inappropriate’ tachycardia is caused by autoantibodies to the B-adrenergic receptor which are stimulatory (mimicking epinephrine); the effect is reversed by Beta blockers
2) Rheumatic heart disease – defined as a heart disease occurring shortly after streptococcal infection (i.e. ‘strep throat’) – is caused by cross-reaction between strep antigen and laminin on heart valves, followed by neutrophil-mediated tissue destruction
3) Dressler syndrome manifests as persistent cardiac pain, fever, malaise, and pericardial effusion seen after a heart attack; caused by an immune response to pericardial or myocardial antigens and treated with anti-inflammatory agents

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4
Q

Type II immunopathology @ muscles

A

Myasthenia Gravis, a disease of progressive muscle weakness, is caused by autoantibody against the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) on the neuromuscular end plate; neutrophils release digestive enzymes at the NMJ resulting in synaptic destruction. Myasthenia = “muscle weakness”

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5
Q

Type II immunopathology @ red blood cells

A

Autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA) – may follow a viral infection or be drug-induced; paroxysmal cold hemoglobinuria (PCH) is a rare form in which patients experience hemolysis after exposure to cold due to autoantibody which only binds to red cells at 15C
-Antibody (IgG or IgM) recognizes RBCs and activates complement via C1q, 1, 4, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9; MAC forms and C9 polymerizes in the membrane, forming a pore that lyses the RBC

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6
Q

Type II immunopathology @ platelets

A

Autoimmune thrombocytopenic purpura (ATP) – caused by autoreactive antibodies to platelets; platelets become opsonized by complement and their destruction occurs in the spleen; manifests as bleeding abnormalities

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7
Q

Type II immunopathology @ thyroid

A

1) Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis – caused, in part, by autoantibodies to thyroid antigens; these autoantibodies are destructive, not stimulatory (as in hyperthyroidism); the thyroid is infiltrated by T cells, resulting in hypothyroidism.
2) Long Acting Thyroid Stimulator (LATS) is an IgG auto-antibody to the TSH receptor on thyroid cells found in the blood of most patients with hyperthyroidism; LATS binds the receptor mimicking TSH and causing the cell to release thyroid hormones

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8
Q

Type II immunopathology @ kidney

A

Goodpasture Syndrome - characterized by production of autoantibodies to Type IV collagen in the basement membrane of lung and kidneys; presents as glomerulonephritis and pneumonitis

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9
Q

Flourescent antibody test in diagnosis of Goodpasture syndrome

A
  1. Use Ab from goat against human Ig and tag with fluorescence
  2. Observe immunoflourescence pattern within glomerulus
  3. Linear pattern indicates Igs are lining basement membrane of glomerulus
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10
Q

“lumpy-bumpy” vs. “linear” immunoflourescent patterns

A
  • Sharp and linear immunofluorescence represents antibody directed against the basement membrane, as in Type II immunopathology
  • Lumpy/bumpy immunofluorescence represents antibody trapped in clumps within the basement membrane, as in Type III immunopathology
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11
Q

Goodpasture vs. SLE-related glomerulonephritis identification

A

In Type II immunopathology the kidney biopsy will already have his autoantibodies on its glomerular basement membrane; add labeled anti-IgG; it will bind if there is already Ab in this kidney and you will see either a “sharp” pattern of fluorescence (Type II) or a “lumpy/clumpy” pattern (Type III)

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12
Q

Molecular nature of “Rheumatoid Factor”

A

RF is anti-IgG IgM antibodie. Good biomarker for rheumatoid arthritis

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13
Q

Role of AIRE gene in preventing autoimmunity

A
  • AIRE is a thymic transcription factor that drives the thymic expression of various extra-thymic proteins; developing T cells that are exposed to these proteins in the thymus are deleted via negative selection so that they do not become auto reactive
  • In normal thymuses, the CHRNA1 gene, which codes for the AChR, is upregulated by AIRE and expressed in the thymus
  • In some families, a certain allele of CHRNA1 does not interact with AIRE and so is not expressed in the thymus; Th clones reactive with the AchR are not deleted by negative selection; Tfh are therefore available to help B cells make antibody to the receptor
  • APECED – chronic candidiasis, hypoparathyroidism, or Addison’s disease
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14
Q

Mechanisms of tissue damage in Type II immunopathology

A
  1. complement-mediated damage: damaged by lysis, phagocytosis, or by released lysosomal enzymes/reactive oxygen species
  2. stimulatory hypersensitivity: autoantibody targets cell-surface receptor and acts as agonist
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15
Q

Illicit help model of autoimmunity

A
  1. anti-self B cell binds self protein + foreign epitope
  2. ingests and digests
  3. foreign epitope presented to Tfh on MHC II
  4. Tfh secretes IL-4, etc.
  5. B cell activated and secretes Abs to self
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16
Q

Forbidden clone model of autoimmunity

A

Clone escapes normal clonal abortion mechanism (e.g. myasthenia gravis)

17
Q

Passive antibody model of autoimmunity

A

Individual receives anti-self antibodies; e.g. patient w/mismatched transfusion, child of mother w/SLE or myasthenia gravis

18
Q

Innocent bystander model of autoimmunity

A

Damage to normal tissue which happens to be associated with or infected by an antigen that is truly foreign

19
Q

Sequestered antigen “escape” model of autoimmunity

A

Self-antigens that are not normally exposed suddenly open to contact with immune cells (e.g. Dressler’s syndrome or sterile men due to mumps)

20
Q

Failure of regulatory mechanisms model of autoimmunnity

A

Imbalance of Th1, Th17, Tfh, Th2, and Treg activity may perturb normal function of immune system and cause exaggerated reactions

21
Q

Direct immunofluorescence test

A

Add labeled anti-IgG to a sample of patients’ tissue to see if IgG are present

22
Q

Indirect immunofluorescence test

A

Add patients serum to normal tissue, then add labeled anti-IgG to see if the patients Abs have adhered to normal tissue