Chapter 59 Host defence mechanisms and immunodeficiency disorders
There is a coordinated immunological response to infection involving both cellular and humoral components. The outcome of an infection will be determined by the balance between the body’s ability to eliminate invading microorganisms and the microorganism’s virulence. Humans have diverse host defence mechanisms to protect the different anatomical compartments of the body from a great variety of microorganisms (Table 59.1). There are many ways in which the immune system can be defective, leading to an increased propensity to infections. The immune response also needs to be controlled to avoid inappropriate and excessive activation, which may damage the host. A certain degree of host damage is inevitable during the response to infection, particularly if there is systemic activation resulting in disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) and an excessive inflammatory response.
Physical barriers |
Skin and mucosal surfaces |
Cilia |
Fever |
Lysozyme |
Lactoferrin |
Acute-phase proteins, e.g. C-reactive protein |
Fibronectin |
Immune system, including secondary mediators |
Other mediators of inflammation |
Kinins |
Vasoactive amines |
Coagulation system |
THE ADAPTIVE IMMUNE SYSTEM
ANTIGEN PRESENTATION
The most important events in the initiation of an immune response are the processing and presentation of fragments of the microorganism in a form which makes the fragments antigenic to lymphocytes. Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I (human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A, B, C) and class II (HLA-DR, DP, DQ) molecules are the major cell-surface antigen presentation molecules. These molecules also determine the nature of the subsequent response against the antigen. Class I MHC molecules are present on most nucleated cells, and present processed endogenous peptides (such as fragments of viruses) to the antigen receptor (T-cell receptor; TcR) of T cells expressing CD8 molecules. Class II MHC molecules present antigenic fragments of microorganisms which are exogenous to cells and have been taken into the cell by phagocytosis, in the case of macrophages and monocytes, or by binding to antigen-specific surface immunoglobulins (the B-cell antigen receptor), in the case of B cells. Antigens presented on class II MHC molecules bind to TcRs on CD4+ T cells.
IMMUNE DEFECTS UNDERLYING IMMUNODEFICIENCY DISORDERS
Defects of the immune system may give rise to immunodeficiency disorders, which are generally of five types: antibody deficiency, complement deficiency, cellular immunodeficiency, combined immunodeficiency (T cells, B cells and NK cells) and phagocyte dysfunction.
CELLULAR IMMUNODEFICIENCY
Impairment of cell-mediated immune responses leads to an increased propensity to infection with microorganisms which are normally controlled by cellular immune responses (Table 59.2). These microorganisms are often pathogens that replicate intracellularly (intracellular pathogens) and cause persistent (latent) infections that reactivate when the cellular immune response against them becomes ineffective.
Mycobacteria | Mycobacterium tuberculosis |
Non-tuberculous mycobacteria | |
Bacteria | Salmonella spp. |
Shigella spp. | |
Listeria monocytogenes | |
Fungi and yeasts | Candida spp. (mucosal infections) |
Pneumocystis jiroveci | |
Cryptococci | |
Aspergillus spp. | |
Protozoa | Toxoplasma gondii |
Cryptosporidia | |
Viruses | Herpes simplex viruses |
Cytomegalovirus | |
Varicella-zoster virus | |
Epstein–Barr virus | |
Molluscum contagiosum virus | |
JC virus (cause of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy) |
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