UNIT 5: Antigen Recognition and Presentation, Autoimmune Diseases, Immunodeficiency, and Immunodiagnostics

Exam Focus: The comparison table for **MHC Class I vs. Class II** is essential (which T cell interacts, which cells express it, source of antigen). Be prepared to describe the basic principles of **ELISA** and **RIA** and list examples of autoimmune diseases.

Table of Contents

  1. Antigen Recognition and Processing
  2. Autoimmune Diseases
  3. Immunodeficiency: HIV and AIDS
  4. Introduction to Immunodiagnostics

1. Antigen Recognition and Processing

T cells cannot directly recognize soluble antigens. They require antigens to be processed and presented on the surface of other cells by Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) molecules.

Class I & Class II MHC Molecules

Feature MHC Class I (HLA-A, B, C) MHC Class II (HLA-DP, DQ, DR)
**Expression** Expressed on **all nucleated cells**. Expressed primarily on **Antigen Presenting Cells (APCs)** (Dendritic cells, Macrophages, B cells).
**Source of Antigen** Endogenous (intracellular, e.g., viral proteins, cancer proteins). Exogenous (extracellular, e.g., bacteria, toxins).
**T cell Interaction** Interacts with **Cytotoxic T cells (TC)** via CD8 coreceptor. Interacts with **Helper T cells (TH)** via CD4 coreceptor.

Antigen Processing and Presentation by MHC Molecule

The pathway by which antigens are degraded into peptides and complexed with MHC molecules.

2. Autoimmune Diseases

These diseases result from the failure of the immune system to distinguish between self and non-self, leading to an immune response that targets and damages the body's own tissues (loss of **self-tolerance**).

Organ-specific Autoimmune Diseases

The immune response is primarily directed against antigens restricted to a single organ.

Systemic Autoimmune Diseases

The immune response is directed against antigens that are broadly distributed throughout the body.

3. Immunodeficiency: HIV and AIDS

A state where the immune system's ability to fight infectious diseases and cancer is compromised.

4. Introduction to Immunodiagnostics

Techniques utilizing the highly specific nature of antigen-antibody binding to detect and measure antigens (pathogens, hormones) or antibodies (indicative of infection or immunity) in a sample.

ELISA (Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay)

A plate-based assay technique designed for detecting and quantifying peptides, proteins, antibodies, and hormones.

RIA (Radioimmunoassay)

A highly sensitive technique used to measure concentrations of substances, usually antigens or antibodies, by employing **radioactive isotopes** (tracers).