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Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or 11/23) Lectures are open to auditors “Flipped sessions” are open to auditors Discussions are restricted to those enrolled in class (Cliff Lowell ([email protected])) Problem sets and review sessions every other week by our TA: John Gagnon(john.gagnon@ ucsf.edu )

Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

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Page 1: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology

Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be

moved to 11/24 or 11/23)

Lectures are open to auditors

“Flipped sessions” are open to auditors

Discussions are restricted to those enrolled in class(Cliff Lowell ([email protected]))

Problem sets and review sessions every other week by our TA: John Gagnon([email protected])

Page 2: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology

Course web site:http://immunology.ucsf.edu/Micro204schedule

Recommended textbook : Janeway’s Immunobiology;OR Abbas and Lichtman Cellular and Molecular Immunology; OR DeFranco, Robertson, and Locksley Immunity; ALSO TRY TO READ 3 PAPERS PER LECTURE

Grades: 2/3 take-home final and 1/3 participation in discussions

My office hours: Mondays 3-4PM HSE1001E or by arrangement ([email protected])

Page 3: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

What does the immune system do?

• It protects us from infections with: – 208 viruses– 538 bacteria– 317 fungi– 287 worms– 57 parasitic protozoa (CDC numbers)

• It promotes normal functioning of the body (tissue cleanup, wound repair)

• It removes abnormal cells including malignant ones• But the immune system can also cause disease when it

is not doing the right thing (allergies, autoimmunity, transplant rejection, etc.)

Page 4: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

The players• Sentinel cells in tissues

– Dendritic cells, macrophages, mast cells• Circulating phagocytes and granulocytes

– Neutrophils, monocytes, eosinophils, basophils• Lymphocytes: cells which can recognize particular

pathogens (but also can cause allergies and autoimmune diseases)– B lymphocytes: antibodies– T lymphocytes: cell-mediated immunity– (also innate lymphoid cells, NK cells, etc.)

• Tissue cells (epithelial cells, endothelial cells, etc.)

Page 5: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Immune sentinel cells in the tissues: dendritic cells

Langerhans cells (epidermal dendritic cells) in the skinWJ Mullholland et al. J. Invest. Dermatol. 126: 1541, 2006.

Green= dendritic cellsBlue= nuclei of all cells

Page 6: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

TNF

or dendritic cell

Inflammatory mediators:-Lipids (prostaglandins, etc.)-Proteins (cytokines/chemokines)

Others

Inflammatory mediators are made in response to detection of infection or injury

Page 7: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Cytokines• “Cytokines”: soluble protein mediators secreted by immune cells

(mostly) and act on other cells (“cyto”) to regulate their activity (“kine”)

• Name of a cytokine often doesn’t reflect its most important function (example: TNF stands for “tumor necrosis factor”)

• many cytokines are called “interleukins” (IL-1, IL-2, etc.)

• Cytokines that direct migration of cells are called “chemotactic cytokines” or “chemokines”

Page 8: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Cytokines and Inflammation

• Pro-inflammatory cytokines are many, but especially important: TNF, IL-1, and IL-6

• TNF and IL-1 signal to endothelial cells to make them:– Leaky to fluid (influx of plasma; containing antibodies,

complement components, etc.)– Sticky for leukocytes, leading to influx of leukocytes

• IL-6 promotes adaptive immune responses; systemic effects

Page 9: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Leukocyte recruitment to sites of inflammation

or DC

Page 10: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

The neutrophil is the immune system’s first responder

• Neutrophils are typically the first white blood cells to come into a site of acute inflammation

(PLAY MOVIE HERE): Lammermann et al. Nature 498: 371-5, 2013.

Page 11: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Phagocytosis and Killing of Microbes

Abbas et al. Fig. 2-17

Page 12: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Innate Immunity vs. Adaptive immunity

• Innate immunity utilizes evolved recognition mechanisms and is surprisingly effective, but changes little based on life experience

• In innate immunity, limited numbers of distinct receptors; recognize highly conserved features of classes of microbes.

• Adaptive immunity learns from previous experience and hence can protect better upon a second infection by the same agent.

• Adaptive immunity has a very large number of distinct “antigen receptors” of T and B lymphocytes; generated by DNA rearrangements in each developing lymphocyte; clonal selection of lymphocytes that recognize an infecting agent

Page 13: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Many different antibodies are created by combinations of gene segments

Page 14: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Adaptive Immunity: Antibodies I

• A molecule that induces the production of an antibody is called an “antigen”

• A few B cells that recognize the infectious agent become activated, each multiply to form a “clone”.

• These progeny then become antibody-secreting factories.

Page 15: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Generation of lymphocytes of many specificities

Clonal deletion to remove self-reactive lymphocytes

Clonal selection to expand pathogen-reactive lymphocytes during an immune response

The Clonal Selection Hypothesis

Page 16: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or
Page 17: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Antibody responses proceed in two phases

Goodnow et al, Nature Immunol. 2010

Page 18: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Adaptive Immunity: Antibodies II

• Rapid production of lower affinity antibody made by short-lived plasma cells

• Slower “germinal center response” selection for higher affinity gives rise to long-lived plasma cells

• Rational design of the “conjugate vaccines” (starting in the 1990s)

Page 19: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Antibodies bind antigens

Two protein components: heavy chain and light chain; can come in 5 varieties of heavy chains:IgM, IgG, IgA, IgE, IgD

Page 20: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Antibodies can be directly protective or can promote immune protective mechanisms via other cells or

molecules

neutralization activation of complement

Page 21: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Adaptive Immunity: Antibodies III

• “Active immunity” (infection, vaccination)

• “Passive immunity”: maternal transfer of IgG across placenta; injection of antibodies to protect against infections, toxins; IVIG for immunodeficiency

• “Monoclonal antibodies” for passive immunity, therapy, diagnosis. All identical more standardized therapeutic or diagnostic.

• To work well as therapy, need to make as human as possible; many new MAb therapeutics in the last 10 years. Most are to treat cancers or to suppress immune responses

Page 22: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Monoclonal antibodies used in medicine

Standardized, unlimited reagents for diagnosis or therapy

Some representative examples. This list is rapidly expanding in recent years

Page 23: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

CD Nomenclature

• Structurally defined leukocyte surface molecule that is expressed on cells of a particular lineage (“differentiation”) and recognized by a group (“cluster”) of monoclonal antibodies is called a member of a cluster of differentiation (CD)

• CD molecules (CD antigens, CD markers) are:• Identified by numbers• Used to classify leukocytes into functionally

distinct subpopulations, e.g. helper T cells are CD4+CD8-, CTLs are CD8+CD4-

• Often involved in leukocyte functions• Antibodies against various CD molecules are used to:• Identify and isolate leukocyte subpopulations• Study functions of leukocytes• Eliminate particular cell populations

Page 24: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

The TCR of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells recognizes MHC-bound peptide + portions of the MHC.

Other T cells ( gd T cells, NKT cells) recognize non-peptide antigens

Recognition of antigen by the TCR

Page 25: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Peptides are bound to MHC molecules and presented to T cells

MHC=major histocompatability complex. HLA=human leukocyte antigen

Page 26: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Killer T cells and Helper T cells

killing

cytokines

helper

Microbe evadesKilling

Page 27: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Adaptive Immunity: Anatomy of the response

• Naïve T cells and B cells recirculate between lymph nodes, spleen, and the blood.

• Antigen is taken to the lymph node either by the flow of lymph or is carried by a maturing dendritic cells that migrate along the lymphatics.

• The dendritic cell presents antigen to naïve T cells in the lymph node.

Page 28: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Role of costimulation in T cell activation

Page 29: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Immune responses are tailored to the type of infection

• Defense against extracellular microbes: IgM, IgG and Th17• Defense against microbes that survive and replicate inside

phagocytes (macrophages and monocytes): “type 1 immunity” (Th1)

• Defense against viruses:– early defense: innate mechanisms that restrict virus replication

(interferon, etc.)– Adaptive immune defense: antibodies which block virus

infection of cells (“neutralizing antibodies”) plus cytotoxic T cells

• Defense against worms and biting insects: “type 2 immunity” (IgE, Th2), Manifestations include: sneezing, coughing, itching, diarrhea, tears, etc. (allergies and asthma mostly involve this type of immune response)

Page 30: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Innate Lymphoid Cells: Parallels to T cell subsets

Spits and DiSanto, Nature Immunology 12: 21-27, 2011

IL-5

Page 31: Microbiology 204: Cellular and Molecular Immunology Class meets MWF 1:00-2:30PM (*exceptions: no class Fri Oct 9; Wed Nov 25 will be moved to 11/24 or

Immune system and chronic inflammation

• Sterile inflammation (tissue injury but no infectious agent present): innate recognition of tissue damage

• Chronic inflammation: if antigen persists, antigen-reactive T cells can drive continued inflammation, which can cause tissue damage (autoimmune diseases and inflammatory diseases)

• Likely important role of inflammation in pathogenesis of chronic diseases: atherosclerosis, type 2 diabetes, probably Alzheimer’s disease, cancer (can be positive or negative)