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Chapter16 Chapter16 Immunological Immunological Tolerance Tolerance

Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

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Page 1: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

Chapter16 Chapter16 Immunological Immunological

ToleranceTolerance

Page 2: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

ContentsContentsPartPart IntroductionⅠ IntroductionⅠ

Part Mechanisms of Self Tolerance ⅡPart Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Ⅱ PartPart Factors affecting Ⅲ Factors affecting Ⅲ Induced ToleranceInduced Tolerance Part Clinical Significance of ⅣPart Clinical Significance of Ⅳ Immunological Immunological ToleranceTolerance

Page 3: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

• Owen first observed immunological tolerance to allogenic antigen in fetal period in 1945

Part IntroductionⅠPart IntroductionⅠ

Page 4: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

cattle of dizygotic twin

Page 5: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

Experiment of Medawar on immunological tolerance

Page 6: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ
Page 7: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

• Definition: A type of specific unresponsiveness to an antigen induced by the exposure of specific lymphocytes to that antigen, but response to other antigens.

• Tolerogens: antigens that induce tolerance

• Types: self-tolerance

induced tolerance

Page 8: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

General features of immunological tolerance

• Tolerance is antigenic specific and results from the recognition of antigens by specific lymphocytes.

• Normal individuals are tolerant of their own antigens(self antigen)----- Self-tolerance.

• Foreign antigens may be administered in ways that preferentially inhibit immune response by inducing tolerance in specific lymphocytes---antigen induction.

Page 9: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

Immunologic features of toleranceImmunologic features of tolerance

It is an antigen-induced, active process Like immunologic memory, it is antigen

specific Like immunologic memory, it can exist in

B cells, T cells or both Like immunologic memory, it's easier to

induce and last longer in T cells than in B cells

It is an antigen-induced, active process Like immunologic memory, it is antigen

specific Like immunologic memory, it can exist in

B cells, T cells or both Like immunologic memory, it's easier to

induce and last longer in T cells than in B cells

Page 10: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

Tolerance in T and B cellsTolerance in T and B cells

Page 11: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

Difference of Immuologic tolerance & immunodeficiency, immunosuppression

Immunodeficiency:Deficiency in the production of humoral and /or cell-mediated immunity---non-specificity to Ag

Immunosuppression: Suppression of immune responses to antigens. This can be achieved by various means, including physical, chemical----non-specificity to Ag

Page 12: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

Part Part II Mechanism of II Mechanism of Self ToleranceSelf Tolerance

Page 13: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

1. Central tolerance: Central tolerance occurs in the central lymphoid

organs as a consequence of immature self-reactive lymphocytes recognizing ubiquitous self-antigen.

2. Peripheral tolerance: tolerance was induced in peripheral organs as a

result of mature self-reactive lymphocytes encountering tissue-specific self antigens under particular conditions

Page 14: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ
Page 15: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

1. Central tolerance

Clonal deletion (apoptotic cell death)

During maturation of T lymphocytes in the thymus or B lymphocytes in the bone marrow, immature lymphocytes that recognize ubiquitous self-antigen with high affinity are deleted by negative selection

Page 16: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

Clonal deletion:negative selection of T cells in the thymus

Clonal deletion:negative selection of T cells in the thymus

Page 17: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

Negative selection of B cells inbone marrow

Negative selection of B cells inbone marrow

Page 18: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

2. Peripheral tolerance1.Peripheral tolerance of T

cells① Clonal anergy

functional inactivation without cell death: lack of co-stimulatory signal

Page 19: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ
Page 20: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

②clonal ignorance: self-reactive lymphocytes remain viable and

functional but do not react to the self antigens in any detectable way.

Page 21: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

③ Immunologically privileged sites

④ Regulatory T cells CD4+CD25+ Treg: TGF- , IL-10

⑤AICD( activation-induced cell death)

Repeated stimulation of lymphocytes by persistent antigens results in death of the activated cells by a process of apoptosis. FasL on activated T cell binds to Fas on activated T cell and then induces T cell apoptosis.

Page 22: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ
Page 23: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ
Page 24: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ
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2) Peripheral tolerance of B cells

• ①Clonal deletion• ②Lack of Th cells• ③Clonal anergy• ④Receptor editing

Page 26: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

Part III Factors affecting tolerance induction

1. Role of antigen

2. Role of the host

Page 27: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

1.role of antigens

(1)Types of antigen• Large, aggregated, complex molecules, properly processed-immune response• soluble, aggregate-free, simple small molecules, not processed-tolerance

(2)Dosage of antigen• Optical dosage-immune response• Very high or very low-tolerance

(3)Portal of entry• Subcutaneous or intramuscular-immune response• Oral or intravenous-tolerance

(4) features of determinant

Page 28: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ
Page 29: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

Low-zone tolerance high-zone

tolerance

抗体滴度

Concentration of antigen

T cells T 、 B cell

TD-Ag TD-Ag

TI-Ag

Immune response

Page 30: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

2.Role of the host(1)Ages• Adult, immunologically mature---Immune response• Embryo and newborn , immunologically immature---

immunological tolerance(2) Differentiation state of cells• Fully differentiated; memory T & B cells—Immune

response• Relative undifferentiated B cell with only IgM, T cells

in the thymic cortex---immunological tolerance(3) Species,Heredity, Gender, Health

Page 31: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

Host age and antigen dose affect tolerance

Host age and antigen dose affect tolerance

newborn adult

Page 32: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

Part Clinical Significance of ⅣPart Clinical Significance of Ⅳimmunological toleranceimmunological tolerance

Page 33: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

• Prevent the rejection of organ allografts and xenografts

• Treat autoimmune diseases

• Treat allergic diseases

1. To induce immunological tolerance

Page 34: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ
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2. To terminate immunological tolerance

• To treat tumor:

enhance first signal or second signal

• To treat infection diseases

Page 36: Chapter16 Immunological Tolerance. Contents Part Ⅰ Introduction Part Ⅱ Mechanisms of Self Tolerance Part Ⅲ Factors affecting Induced Tolerance Part Ⅳ

SummarySummary Definition of immunological tolerance

Features of immunological tolerance

Induction of immunological tolerance

Mechanism of immunological tolerance

Clinical application of immunological tolerance