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1. Historic introduction to innate immunity
- Prof. Heiko Herwald
- Prof. Arne Egesten
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2. Evolution of innate immunity
- Prof. Jim Kaufman
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3. The phagocytic synapse in distinguishing particulate and soluble stimuli
- Prof. David Underhill
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4. How bacterial pathogens avoid phagocyte killing
- Dr. Thomas Areschoug
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5. Origin of myeloid cells
- Prof. Frederick A. Geissmann
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6. Dendritic cells
- Prof. Muriel Moser
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7. Eosinophil biology and disorders associated with eosinophilia
- Dr. Thomas B. Nutman
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8. CD1d-restricted NKT cells: regulators of inflammation and autoimmunity
- Prof. Steven A. Porcelli
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9. Innate-like B cells
- Prof. John F. Kearney
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10. Cytoplasmic innate immune sensors
- Prof. Seth Masters
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12. The role of myeloid cells in HIV associated immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome
- Prof. Robert Wilkinson
- Prof. Graeme Meintjes
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13. Antimicrobial peptides in the innate immune system of the lung
- Prof. Dr. Pieter S. Hiemstra
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14. Chemokines and their receptors: their biology and therapeutic relevance
- Dr. Amanda Proudfoot
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15. Heat shock proteins and their role in the immune regulation of inflammation
- Prof. Willem Van Eden
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16. Tissue damage control confers host tolerance to infection
- Dr. Miguel P. Soares
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17. Autophagy as a barrier to infection
- Prof. Michele Swanson
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18. Innate immunity in the intestine in health and disease
- Prof. Kevin Maloy
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19. Dendritic cells and the eye: their role in the ocular immune response
- Prof. John V. Forrester
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20. Mononuclear phagocytes and HIV infection
- Dr. Guido Poli
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21. Th17 cells and innate immunity
- Prof. Mihai Netea
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22. Epigenetic regulation of innate immunity
- Dr. Osamu Takeuchi
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23. Intracellular DNA sensing pathways
- Prof. Veit Hornung
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24. Physiology of innate immunity
- Prof. Keith W. Kelley
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26. Regulation of type 2 immunity by basophils
- Prof. David Voehringer
- Archived Lectures *These may not cover the latest advances in the field
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27. TLRs, NLRs, DAMPs and PAMPs
- Prof. Luke O'Neill
Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Outline
- Autophagosomes have a distinct structure
- Terminology
- Membrane traffic
- Yeast geneticists catalyze research
- Conservation of autophagy components
- Autophagy is inhibited by mTOR
- Atg proteins govern autophagy
- Reagents for autophagy research
- Monitoring autophagosome formation
- Monitoring autophagosome decay
- Pathogens that encounter autophagy
- Outcomes of microbe encounters
- Basis for autophagosome accumulation
- Ultrastructure of Legionella vacuole
- Legionella route in permissive cells
- GTPases promote vacuole biogenesis
- Model: Legionella slows autophagy
- NLR Naip5 implicated in autophagy
- Naip5 facts
- Model: inflammasomes induce autophagy
- Crohn's disease links NLR, autophagy
- Nod1 and 2 recruit Atg16L1 protein
- Shigella evasion of autophagy
- Listeria evasion of autophagy
- Autophagy stimulates MHCII pathway
- Autophagy stimulates MHCI pathway
- Autophagy in infection and immunity
- Acknowledgements
Topics Covered
- Autophagosome biogenesis
- Autophagy a regulated intersection of the secretory and endosomal pathways
- Genetic analysis in yeast has accelerated autophagy research
- Autophagy is inhibited by mTOR
- Autophagosome biogenesis is coordinated by a cascade of Atg proteins
- Autophagosomes mature rapidly in C57Bl/6 macrophages
- A wide variety of pathogens encounter the autophagy pathway
- Autophagy in infection and immunity
- Illustrations: Legionella pneumophila
- Shigella flexnerii
- Crohns' disease
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Naip5 NOD-like receptor cytosolic surveillance protein
- Inflammasome components coordinate autophagy and pyroptosis as barriers to infection
- Autophagy enhances MHCI and MHCII antigen presentation
Links
Series:
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Talk Citation
Swanson, M. (2012, April 3). Autophagy as a barrier to infection [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved March 12, 2025, from https://doi.org/10.69645/TWNS1435.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
- Published on April 3, 2012
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Michele Swanson has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.