1 / 50

Cytokines

Cytokines. Cytokines and their Receptors in Inter-Cellular Communication. Cytokines-Based Diseases and Cytokine Therapy. Updated: November 15, 2012. Folder title: Cytokine. (Presented in Part 2 under “Cells of the Immune Response”). Key Hematopoietic Growth Factors and Their Targets.

artan
Télécharger la présentation

Cytokines

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cytokines Cytokines and their Receptors in Inter-Cellular Communication Cytokines-Based Diseases and Cytokine Therapy Updated: November 15, 2012 Folder title: Cytokine

  2. (Presented in Part 2 under “Cells of the Immune Response”) Key Hematopoietic Growth Factors and Their Targets Relatively Multi-Specific: Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor GMCSF Interleukin III - IL3 Relatively Mono-Specific: Granulocyte Colony Stimulating Factor - GCSF Macrophage Colony Stimulating Factor - MCSF Erythropoietin - EPO

  3. Cytokine Table P l eo t r o pic R e d u n d a n t

  4. Activities of Cytokines: What They Do Cytokines in Hematopoiesis Cytokines in Innate and Adaptive immunity

  5. Hematopoiesis Stem Cell Factor from Bone Marrow Stromal Cells Lymphocytes Hematopoietic Cytokines and Hematopoiesis: Immunology, 5th Edition, Figure 12-16, p. 297 ------------------Myelocytes------------------

  6. Stem Cell Production Myelocyte Production Lymphocyte Production

  7. The Complexity of Cytokine-Receptor Signaling and Effects What cytokine is being made? When is it being made? At what concentration? How long will it be around? Is it being modified by other proteins? Activated? Degraded? What other cytokines are being made? Do they affect the first cytokine? Do they activate or inhibit the first cytokine? Is the cytokine receptor available on the target cell or cells? Is the receptor being activated or inhibited? Is the receptor defective? Does the receptor have a high enough affinity for the cytokine?

  8. Cytokines: Where They Come From: The Discovery of IL1 How They Work

  9. Macrophage to T-Helper

  10. Discovery of IL1 PHA = phytohemagglutinin (poly-clonal t-cell mitogen from fungi

  11. Gamma Interferon Pleiotropic activity of Interferon Gamma. Immunology, 5th Edition, Figure 15-15, p. 355

  12. Table of Redundancy and Pleiotropy See Table 15-3, Immunology, 5th Edition, p. 350

  13. Cytokines and TH1 and TH2 Helper T-Cell Subsets: Immunological and Pathobiological Effects

  14. Blocked TH1 and TH2 in Disease Blocked

  15. Dashed -------- arrow indicates blocking response Roles of TH1 and TH2

  16. Cytokines and TH1 and TH2 See Table 12-4, p. 315, Top Half Immunology, 6th Edition

  17. Functions of TH1 and TH2 See Table 4-4, p. 96 for structures and functions of IgG subtypes See Table 12-4, Bottom Half, p315, 6th Edition

  18. TH1 and TH2 Helper Cell Subsets in the Pathology and Progression of Infection with Mycobacterium lepraeTuberculoid (Cell-mediated) and Lepromatous (Humoral response) Leprosy(Figure 12-14, Immunology, 6th Edition, p. 318)M-RNA from Tuberculoid or lepromatous lesions analyzed for types of cytokines being produced

  19. Cytokine Receptors in Normal immune Response and in Pathobiology The Specific Cytokines that are present, and their concentrations matter in how the immune response reacts. The presence and structure of cytokines receptors matter just as much as the cytokines themselves.

  20. Receptors for IL2 Gamma subunit is used by other cytokine receptors (IL15, IL7, IL9, IL4)

  21. General model of cytokine receptors for interleukin and interferon types of cytokines. See figure 12-6 (b) and (c) p. 308, for interleukin (“hematopoietin”) and interferon class of cytokines STAT = signal transducers and activators of transcription. See Table 12-2, p. 313 for STAT family of transcription factors associated with different cytokines of the interleukin and interferon series

  22. IL2 Receptor Family Figure 12-7 (c) Kuby, 6th Ed., p. 309 IL2RFam

  23. Cytokines, Cytokine Receptors, and Human Disease(Part 1): Over-production of Cytokines Bacterial Septic Shock: Bacterial Cell-wall Endotoxins Macrophage Overproduction if IL-1 and TNF-alpha Bacterial Toxic Shock Polyclonal activation of T-cells by Super-Antigens Over-production of IL-1, TNF, other cytokines

  24. Cytokines, Cytokine Receptors, and Human Disease(Part 2) Cytokine Receptor Miss-expression Cutaneous T-Cell Lymphoma Inappropriate Expression of IL-2 and IL-2R X-Linked Severe Combined Immune-Deficiency (X-SCID) Boy-in-the Bubble Syndrome Failure to Express IL-2R Gamma Subunit May Also Affect IL4R and IL7R Produces Broad-ranging Immune Unresponsiveness

  25. Gamma C Subunit Shared

  26. Cytokines, Cytokine Receptors, and Human Disease(Part 3) Cytokine Receptor Blocking Chagas Disease (Trypanosoma Cruzi) Severe Immunosuppression of Infectious Etiology Blocked Expression of IL-2R Alpha Subunit

  27. Cytokines, Cytokine Receptors, and Human Disease (Part 4)Cytokine Mimics Anti-inflammatory and Immunosuppressive Viral Products as Mimics of Cytokinesand Cytokine Receptors XSCID

  28. Immunosuppression and Anti-inflammatory Effects of Viral Mimics of Cytokines and of Cytokine Receptors. (Kuby, 6th Ed., p. 314) Viral Mimics of Cytokines and Receptors Macrophage inflammatory protein For information on chemokines, See Table 13-2, p. 330, and footnotes to Table 13-2, Kuby, 6th Edition. Chemokines are small MW cytokines that mostly regulate leukocyte trafficking and adherence but also regulate non-leukocyte cellular interactions. Monocyte chemoattractant protein

  29. Other Sources of Cytokines used in Host Response to Pathogens: e.g. Mediators in Type I Immediate Hypersensitivity

  30. Overview of Mast Cell Mediated Type I ImmediateHypersensitivity: Triggering of Sensitized Cells and Release of Early and Late Mediators:How Do We Treat This??? IgEOView

  31. Cytokines in Therapy of Diseases Since cytokines have potent activities at low concentrations in controlling responses of host cells to normal and pathological events, can we use Cytokines deliberately in therapy?

  32. Tumor Necrosis Factor and Melanocytes

  33. Tumor Necrosis Factor in Vivo

  34. Tumor Necrosis Factor and Weight Loss

  35. Cytokine Therapies in the Clinic

  36. Turning Down Helper T-Cell and Cytotoxic T-Cell Mediated Auto-immune Responses

  37. Cytokine Activation of Leucocytes in Anti-Leukemia Treatments

  38. LAK Cells

  39. TIL Cells

  40. On a scale of -2 to +2 rate:1 = -2 = I’m totally lost; 2 = -1 = I’m having a hard time but I get some of it3 = 0 = I’m doing OK. I get a lot of it. I’ll figure the rest out later4 = +1 = I’m doing fine. I get most of it; 5 = +2 = This is no problem. Please get moving before I get totally bored

  41. n I am here! • Yes • No • Not sure 0 of 103

More Related