Recognition and immune response models in infection

Journal Title: Αρχεία Ελληνικής Ιατρικής - Year 2007, Vol 24, Issue 4

Abstract

The immune system reacts to protect the host from infection. During the past 50 years immunologists have elucidated the basic mechanisms which control the immune response against pathogens. They have suggested theoretical models to explain patterns of immune recognition and response to infection. Some confirmed the theoretical aspects with critical experimental data contributing significantly to the field of the immunology of infectious diseases. In this review the initial self-nonself discrimination models (SNSD models) and Janeway's extended self-nonself model (infectious-non self discrimination model) are discussed. Janeway's theory underlined the critical role of innate immunity in infection. Janeway suggested that the immune system evolved to discriminate infectious non self from non infectious self. This model hypothesized that immune responses could not occur unless antigen-presenting cells were first activated, and they were activated via pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) that recognized evolutionarily conserved molecules on infectious non self organisms (pathogen-associated molecular patterns, PAMPs). Toll-like receptors are the most representative members of the PRRs family and they link functionally innate and adaptive immunity in infection. Innate immunity triggers and determines the type (T1, T2) of the adaptive immune response against pathogens. Recently Matzinger proposed the danger theory to answer those questions that classical SNSD models do not. The danger model suggests that the immune system is more concerned with tissue damage than with foreign invaders, and the PRRs are triggered by distressed tissue-derived danger/alarm signals. The hydrophobicity model proposed that the hydrophobic portions of biological molecules act, when exposed, as universal damage-associated molecular patterns to initiate repair, remodelling and immunity. Other theories concerning the recognition of the pathogen and the initiation and the outcome of the immune response, such as the integrity model and ignorance hypothesis, are also mentioned.

Authors and Affiliations

P. Skendros

Keywords

Related Articles

Αssociation of multiple sclerosis with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined<br /> significance<br />

The cases are presented of two patients with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) associated with multiple sclerosis (MS). MGUS is the result of a plasma cell clone escaping normal control. MS is...

Endogenous PAF-acetylhydrolase affects the antigenicity of oxidized LDL<br /> in patients with coronary artery disease

OBJECTIVE The oxidative modification of LDL induces immunogenic epitopes, many of which are due to phospholipids formed during oxidation, such as oxidized phosphatidylcholine (oxPC), lysophosphatidylcholine (lyso-PC), pl...

Scale validation methodology

The systematic use of psychometric scales, in psychology and psychiatry, but also in other research initiatives, necessitates the development and use of research methodology that assures validity and reliability of these...

Combined fractures of the femur

The combination of fractures of the femoral shaft with fractures of the proximal and/or distal part are quite rare injuries, which may be missed at the primary examination in 20–31% of cases. These injuries usually occur...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP107544
  • DOI -
  • Views 54
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

P. Skendros (2007). Recognition and immune response models in infection . Αρχεία Ελληνικής Ιατρικής, 24(4), 320-330. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-107544