Lecture 10: Autoimmune Disease: Diabetes and SLE Flashcards

1
Q

Recall the overview of immunological tolerance.

A
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2
Q

Tolerance induced during _________.

A

early life

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3
Q

Why is tolerance important?

A
  • Specificity of the adaptive immune system is critical
  • Tolerance arises as a result of the processes that drive both T and B cell diversity during lymphocyte development
  • Self-reactivity can occur and result in host damage

Note: Immune system is in balance between immunity and tolerance.

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4
Q

Recall the overview of T cell tolerance mechanisms.

A
  • Central tolerance
    • occurs in the thymus
    • positive/negative selection of immature T cells
  • Peripheral tolerance
    • occurs in peripheral tissues
    • ‘regulatory’ responses involving mature T cells
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5
Q

Recall the overview of T cell selection in the thymus.

A
  • occurs as T cell matures
  • dependent on the affinity of TCR binding to self-antigen
    • high: T cells deleted
    • low: T cells deleted
    • intermediate: selected and enter the periphery
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6
Q

Recall the overview of peripheral tolerance of T cells.

A
  • self-reactive T cells that enter the circulation are regulated by peripheral tolerance
  • Mechanisms include:
    • clonal anergy (lack of costimulation)
    • ignorance (do not encounter their antigen)
    • suppression by cytokines (TNF-beta)
    • specific regulation (Treg induction)
    • negative regulation (engagement of CTLA4)
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7
Q

Recall about B cell tolerance.

A

It occurs in the bone marrow. It requires T cell tolerance to be intact. Self-reactive B cells:

  • Deleted when high affinity for the antigen
  • Made anergic when the antigen is soluble and at high concentration
  • Ignorance when lacking T cell help or low antigen concentration
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8
Q

What is autoimmunity?

A
  • Immune response against self-antigen
  • Involve both self-reactive T and B cells
  • Presence of autoreactive lymphocytes does not necessarily result in autoimmunity
    • naturally occurring autoantibodies
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9
Q

What happens when tolerance fails?

A

Autoimmune disease can occur when mechanisms of immunological tolerance break down. It can be caused by:

  • ​Acquisition of T cell help
  • Molecular mimicry
  • Failure of regulatory networks
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10
Q

Recall the pathogenesis of autoimmunity.

A
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11
Q

Recall the concept of molecular mimicry in autoimmunity.

A

It refers to similar/identical epitopes between microbe and host. It is important when host antigen has an important biological function. e.g. Streptococcal protein and bacterial endocarditis

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12
Q

Recall the role of Treg in autoimmunity.

A

Tregs are immunosuppressive and generally suppress or downregulate induction and proliferation of effector T cells.

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13
Q

What are Milgrom and Witebsky’s criteria for autoimmune diseases,

A
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14
Q

Recall the spectrum of autoimmune diseases.

A
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15
Q

What are pathogenic autoantibodies? How are they classified?

A
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16
Q

Recall the autoantibody patterns of non-organ specific autoimmune diseases.

A
17
Q

Recall the autoantibody patterns of the characteristic of organ-specific autoimmune diseases.

A
18
Q

What is diabetes?

A
  • Group of diseases affecting insulin production and/or function
  • Organ-specific autoimmune disease (Type I)
  • Targets the islets of Langerhans cells of the pancreas
    • important for insulin secretion
  • Secondary damage to kidneys, eyes, nerves, blood vessels
  • Onset from first year of life to older adulthood
19
Q

Recall the types of diabetes

A
20
Q

Recall the diagram in regards to Type 1 and 2 diabetes.

A
21
Q

What is LADA?

A

Latent Autoimmune Diabetes in Adults (LADA) is a form of autoimmune diabetes which is diagnosed in individuals who are older than the usual age of onset of type I diabetes. It also is known as “slow onset type I” diabetes or “type 1.5”. LADA patients often thought to have type 2 diabetes due to their age at diagnosis.

22
Q

Recall the features of LADA.

A
23
Q

Recall the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes.

A
24
Q

Recall the pathological features of Type 1 diabetes.

A
25
Q

Recall the diagram in regards to islet cell pathology.

A
26
Q

Recall the immunological events in diabetes.

A
27
Q

Recall the autoantibodies in diabetes.

A

Major autoantibodies are reactive to 4 islet autoantigens (termed islet cell autoantibodies, ICA):

  • Insulinoma-associated antigen-2 (ICA512)
  • Insulin (micro-insulin autoantibodies, IAA)
  • Glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 (GAD65)
  • Zinc transporter 8 (ZnT8)

Note: these leads toa n important role of B cells in pathogenesis in diabetes type I

28
Q

Recall the summary of type I diabetes.

A
29
Q

What is systemic lupus erythematosus?

A
  • Multi-system chronic autoimmune disease
    • remitting and relapsing
  • Acute or insidious in onset
  • Many organs affected
    • skin
    • kidney
30
Q

Recall the criteria for SLE classification.

A
31
Q

Recall the characteristics of typical non-organ specific autoantibodies.

A

Autoantibodies target diverse structures. It can be detected against:

  • Nuclear antigens
  • Cytoplasmic surfaces
  • Cell-surface antigens

It is pathogenic in nature. Main diagnostic feature is the presence of anti-nuclear autoantibodies.

32
Q

What are anti-nuclear autoantibodies?

A

Antibodies to Sm antigen and dsDNA are diagnostic of SLE. Others include:

  • anti-lymphocyte
  • anti-platelet
  • anti-phospholipid
33
Q

Recall the anti-nuclear autoantibody patterns.

A
34
Q

Recall the pathogenesis of SLE.

A

Type III Hypersensitivity Disease

Type III hypersensitivity occurs when there is accumulation of immune complexes (antigen-antibody complexes) that have not been adequately cleared by innate immune cells, giving rise to an inflammatory response and attraction of leukocytes.

35
Q

Recall the pathological mechanism of SLE.

A
36
Q

What is Type III Hypersensitivity?

A
37
Q

Recall the hallmark lesions in SLE.

A
38
Q

Recall the clinical course in SLE.

A
  • disease course can be variable
  • 90% survival (5 years); 80% 10 years
  • Most common cause of death is renal failure
  • Treatment:
    • Corticosteroids
    • Immunosuppressants