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- Fundamental aspects
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1. Inflammation and tissue homeostasis
- Prof. Herman Waldmann
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2. Introduction to the immune system
- Prof. Herman Waldmann
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3. Hematopoiesis: the making of an immune system
- Prof. Paul J. Fairchild
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4. Inflammation: purposes, mechanisms and development
- Prof. Pietro Ghezzi
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5. Phagocytosis
- Dr. Eileen Uribe-Querol
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6. Regulated cell death mechanisms and their crosstalk with the immune system 1
- Dr. Luis Alberto Baena-Lopez
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7. Regulated cell death mechanisms and their crosstalk with the immune system 2
- Dr. Luis Alberto Baena-Lopez
- Innate immunity
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11. Cells of the innate immune system
- Prof. Kevin Maloy
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12. Microbial recognition and the immune response
- Dr. Dana Philpott
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13. Toll-like receptor signalling during infection and inflammation
- Prof. Luke O'Neill
- Intercellular mediators
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14. Chemokines
- Dr. James E. Pease
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15. Cytokines
- Prof. Iain McInnes
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16. IL-1 family cytokines as the canonical DAMPs of the immune system
- Prof. Seamus Martin
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17. Glycans at the frontiers of inflammation, autoimmunity and cancer
- Prof. Salomé S. Pinho
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18. Glycoimmunology
- Prof. Paula Videira
- Adaptive immunity B cells
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21. Antigen recognition in the immune system
- Prof. Herman Waldmann
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22. B cell biology
- Prof. Richard Cornall
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23. Antibody structure and function: antibody structure
- Dr. Mike Clark
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24. Antibody structure and function: antibody function
- Dr. Mike Clark
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25. Antibody genes and diversity
- Dr. Mike Clark
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26. In vivo antibody discovery and hybridoma technology
- Prof. Dr. Katja Hanack
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27. Antibody engineering: beginnings to bispecifics and beyond
- Dr. Ian Wilkinson
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29. The immunobiology of Fc receptors
- Prof. Mark Cragg
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30. Immunoreceptors
- Prof. Anton van der Merwe
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31. Affinity, avidity and kinetics in immune recognition
- Prof. Anton van der Merwe
- Adaptive immunity T cells
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32. The thymus and T cell development: a primer
- Prof. Georg Holländer
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33. Lineage decisions in the thymus: T cell lineage commitment
- Prof. Bruno Silva-Santos
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34. Lineage decisions in the thymus: αβ and γδ T cell lineages
- Prof. Bruno Silva-Santos
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35. CD4 T cell subsets
- Dr. Brigitta Stockinger
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36. Cytotoxic T lymphocytes
- Prof. Gillian M. Griffiths
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37. Gamma delta T-cells
- Prof. Bruno Silva-Santos
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38. Tfh and Tfr cells
- Prof. Luis Graca
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39. Tissue resident memory T cells (TRM)
- Dr. Marc Veldhoen
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40. Mathematical modeling in immunology
- Prof. Ruy M. Ribeiro
- The importance of the MHC in immunity
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41. The MHC and MHC molecules 1
- Prof. Jim Kaufman
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42. The MHC and MHC molecules 2
- Prof. Jim Kaufman
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43. Natural killer cells
- Dr. Philippa Kennedy
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44. Human NK cells
- Prof. Lorenzo Moretta
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46. NK cells in viral immunity
- Prof. Lewis Lanier
- Lymphocyte activation
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47. Signal transduction by leukocyte receptors
- Dr. Omer Dushek
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48. Immunological memory 1
- Prof. David Gray
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49. Immunological memory 2
- Prof. David Gray
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50. Studying immune responses “one cell at a time”
- Dr. Mir-Farzin Mashreghi
- Major cellular partners in immunity
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51. The mononuclear phagocyte system - tissue resident macrophages: distribution and functions
- Prof. Emeritus Siamon Gordon
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52. The mononuclear phagocyte system: tissue resident macrophages - activation and regulation
- Prof. Emeritus Siamon Gordon
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53. Dendritic cells: professional antigen presenting cells
- Prof. Paul J. Fairchild
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54. Mucosal immunology
- Prof. Daniel Mucida
- Immunological tolerance and regulation
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55. Self-tolerance
- Prof. Herman Waldmann
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56. Tolerance and autoimmunity
- Prof. Emerita Anne Cooke
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57. The balance between intestinal immune homeostasis and inflammation
- Prof. Dr. Janneke Samsom
- Translational immunology - immune deficiency
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58. Primary immunodeficiency disorders
- Dr. Smita Y. Patel
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59. Changes in innate and adaptive immunity during human ageing 1
- Dr. Roel De Maeyer
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60. Changes in innate and adaptive immunity during human ageing 2
- Dr. Roel De Maeyer
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61. The aging immune system
- Prof. Ana Caetano
- Translational immunology - protection against pathogenic microbes
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62. Immune responses to viruses
- Prof. Paul Klenerman
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63. HIV and the immune system
- Prof. Quentin Sattentau
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64. COVID-19: the anti-viral immune response
- Prof. Danny Altmann
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65. Bacterial immune evasion
- Prof. Christoph Tang
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66. The immunology underlying tuberculosis
- Prof. Thomas R. Hawn
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67. Innate immunity to fungi
- Prof. Gordon D. Brown
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68. Parasite immunity: introduction and Plasmodium
- Dr. Catarina Gadelha
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69. Parasite immunity: Leishmania and Schistosoma
- Dr. Catarina Gadelha
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70. Vaccination
- Dr. Anita Milicic
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71. The history of vaccines 1
- Prof. Emeritus Anthony R. Rees
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72. The history of vaccines 2
- Prof. Emeritus Anthony R. Rees
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73. The history of vaccines 3
- Prof. Emeritus Anthony R. Rees
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74. The science of vaccine adjuvants
- Dr. Derek O'Hagan
- Translational immunology - hypersensitivity, autoimmune disease and their management
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75. Hypersensitivity diseases: type 1 hypersensitivity
- Prof. Herman Waldmann
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76. Innate lymphoid cells in allergy
- Prof. Emeritus Shigeo Koyasu
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77. Hypersensitivity diseases: type II-IV hypersensitivity
- Prof. Sara Marshall
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78. Immune memory underlying lifelong peanut allergy
- Dr. Kelly Bruton
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79. Memory B cells in allergy: B cell activation and response
- Dr. Kelly Bruton
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80. Memory B cells in allergy: ontogeny, phenotype and plasticity
- Dr. Kelly Bruton
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81. B cells at the crossroads of autoimmune diseases
- Dr. Xiang Lin
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82. Interleukin-17: from clone to clinic
- Prof. Leonie Taams
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83. Autoimmunity and type 1 diabetes
- Prof. Emerita Anne Cooke
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84. What is new in type 1 diabetes?
- Prof. Åke Lernmark
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85. Antibodies to control or prevent type 1 diabetes
- Dr. Robert Hilbrands
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86. Monoclonal antibodies in haemato-oncology
- Prof. Mark Cragg
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87. Therapeutic antibodies
- Dr. Geoffrey Hale
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88. Endothelial cells: regulators of autoimmune-neuroinflammation
- Dr. Laure Garnier
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89. Neuroimmunometabolism
- Prof. Ana Domingos
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90. The immunology of multiple sclerosis
- Dr. Joanne Jones
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91. Immunology of the peripheral nervous system: the inflammatory neuropathies
- Dr. Simon Rinaldi
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92. Ocular immunology: an overview of immune mechanisms operating in the eye
- Dr. Eleftherios Agorogiannis
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93. Understanding myasthenia gravis and advances in its management
- Prof. Henry J. Kaminski
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94. The immunology underlying rheumatic diseases
- Dr. Hussein Al-Mossawi
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96. Complement and lupus
- Prof. Marina Botto
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97. Immune mechanisms in liver diseases
- Prof. Paul Klenerman
- Translational immunology - transplantation immunology
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98. Principles of transplantation: overview of the immune response
- Prof. Emerita Kathryn Wood
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99. Factors influencing outcomes in clinical transplantation 1
- Prof. Emerita Kathryn Wood
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100. Factors influencing outcomes in clinical transplantation 2
- Prof. Emerita Kathryn Wood
- Translational immunology - cancer immunology
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101. Cancer immunology
- Prof. Tim Elliott
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102. Cancer immunotherapy
- Prof. Tim Elliott
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103. Myeloid-derived suppressor cells in cancer
- Prof. Dmitry Gabrilovich
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104. IL-2 in the immunotherapy of autoimmunity and cancer
- Prof. Thomas Malek
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105. Latest advances in the development of CAR & TCR T-cell treatments for solid tumours
- Dr. Else Marit Inderberg
Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Aim of the lecture
- A simple view of an immune response
- Naive CD4 T cells differentiation
- Achieving tolerance to self antigens
- Central tolerance
- Peripheral self antigen expression in the thymus
- Aire KO mice develop autoimmune pathology
- Peripheral tolerance to self antigens
- Peripheral deletion
- Aire expressing cells play a role in deleting autoreactive T cells
- eTAC can induce tolerance through deletion
- LEC can induce tolerance through deletion
- Blockade of PD-L1 rescues FH cells from deletion
- CD8+ DCs and cross presentation
- Cross presentation model
- Reduced proliferation of OVA-reactive CD8+ T cells
- Transferring OT1 cells into an animal results in initial proliferation followed by cell death
- Clonal anergy
- In vivo significance of anergy
- Sequestration, immune privilege, ignorance
- Ignorance
- The autoreactive cells are there, but don’t do anything unless provoked
- Regulation of the immune response
- Expression of Foxp3 in the thymus and periphery
- Prevention of IBD and autoimmune gastritis
- Adult mice depend upon Foxp3+ T cells for tolerance and survival
- Autoimmunity induced following use of checkpoint blockade for cancer therapy
- Tolerance and autoimmunity
- T cells that recognise self antigen can be detected in the peripheral blood
- Not all self antigens are expressed in the thymus
- Iodination of thyroglobulin
- Hormonogenic sites in human thyroglobulin
- Tolerance and autoimmunity
- Induction of autoimmune thyroid disease
- Thyroiditis scoring system
- Induction of other diseases
- Factors that promote tolerance
- Experimental examples of tolerance protocols
- Aerosol peptide prevents EAE
- Induced tolerance was transferrable by Treg cells
- Tolerance and autoimmunity
- Thank you
Topics Covered
- Central and peripheral mechanisms involved in tolerance
- Aire as an important transcriptional regulator
- The importance of regulatory T cells
- The role of inhibitory molecules
- Factors than can promote tolerance
Links
Series:
Categories:
Therapeutic Areas:
Talk Citation
Cooke, A. (2020, October 29). Tolerance and autoimmunity [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved February 5, 2025, from https://doi.org/10.69645/MFPW5936.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Emerita Anne Cooke has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
A selection of talks on Immunology & Inflammation
Transcript
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0:00
Hello everybody. I'm Anne Cooke.
I'm the Emeritus Professor of Immunobiology in
the Pathology Department in the University of Cambridge.
Today I'm going to talk about immune tolerance and autoimmunity.
0:14
Now, the aim of this lecture is really to understand
how self-tolerance is established and maintained,
and how it might be broken, and obviously,
if it's broken, it has the possibility of leading to autoimmune diseases.
0:28
Now, a very simplistic view of an immune response is that antigen enters the system,
is taken up and presented by a dendritic cell and
presented to a helper T-cell in the context of MHC class II.
The helper T-cell can provide help for a cytotoxic T-cell or to a B-cell,
and the B-cell can elaborate antibodies.
It also has been activated by antigen as a cytotoxic T-cell.
Now, once the antigen is clear from the immune system,
then everything returns back to baseline to homeostasis,
and the immune response itself dies down, but of course,
you will have some memory responses almost certainly generated during that time.
1:08
The type of T-cell that a naive T-cell differentiates into
is dependent on the cytokines that are around at the time of the initial stimulation.
For example, in the context of IL-12 being produced by dendritic cells,
you will get a predominantly Th1 response.
That response is very effective at dealing with viruses and bacteria,
and is important for intracellular immunity in the context of how far you get Th2 cells,
and Th2 cells can help B-cells and they're really important
in dealing with extracellular large pathogens, for example, helminths.
IL-6 together with TGF-beta is involved in
the generation of Th17 cells which are important to mucosal immunity
and TGF-beta alone in the absence of inflammatory cytokines can
lead to the development in the periphery of regulatory T-cells which are host protective.