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| =Immune Tolerance= | | =Immune Tolerance= |
− | Immunological tolerance occurs when there is an unresponsiveness towards particular antigens, so any further immune responses are prevented or suppressed. Tolerance is required to prevent: | + | Immunological tolerance occurs when there is unresponsiveness towards particular antigens, so any further immune responses are prevented or suppressed. Tolerance is required to prevent: |
| * Potentially harmful inflammatory responses towards innocuous substances, such as air-borne or food molecules | | * Potentially harmful inflammatory responses towards innocuous substances, such as air-borne or food molecules |
| * To prevent an immune attack against host tissue - this is known as '''self-tolerance''' | | * To prevent an immune attack against host tissue - this is known as '''self-tolerance''' |
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| ===Peripheral Tolerance=== | | ===Peripheral Tolerance=== |
− | It is inevitable that some self-reactive T cells will evade the thymic selection process and enter the peripheral circulation, because some self-antigens are not expressed in the thymus, and others will not show sufficient affinity to MHC to form the MHC:self-peptide complex required for negative selection in the thymus. Conversely some T cell receptors will not have enough affinity for their respective self-antigen to induce apoptosis. Peripheral tolerance describes an unresponsiveness towards self-antigen which is developed outside the primary lymphoid organs. There are four ways this may be achieved in T cells: | + | It is inevitable that some self-reactive T cells will evade the thymic selection process and enter the peripheral circulation, because some self-antigens are not expressed in the thymus, and others will not show sufficient affinity to MHC to form the MHC: self-peptide complex required for negative selection in the thymus. Conversely some T cell receptors will not have enough affinity for their respective self-antigen to induce apoptosis. Peripheral tolerance describes unresponsiveness towards self-antigen which is developed outside the primary lymphoid organs. There are four ways this may be achieved in T cells: |
| * Ignorance | | * Ignorance |
| * Anergy | | * Anergy |
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| ==Regulatory T Cells== | | ==Regulatory T Cells== |
− | A number of cell populations identified during studies on autoimmunity and organ transplantation have shown the capacity to suppress responses to self-antigen and therefore can be utelised to regulate rejection. Although once considered a tentative theory, this form of tolerance is now considered a major mechanism in the protection of host tissue from immune attack. | + | A number of cell populations identified during studies on autoimmunity and organ transplantation have shown the capacity to suppress responses to self-antigen and therefore can be utilised to regulate rejection. Although once considered a tentative theory, this form of tolerance is now considered a major mechanism in the protection of host tissue from immune attack. |
| [[Image:T reg cells.JPG|thumb|right|200px|Regulatory T cells- copyright Brian Catchpole]] | | [[Image:T reg cells.JPG|thumb|right|200px|Regulatory T cells- copyright Brian Catchpole]] |
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