Tuesday, 21 January 2014

human biology - Why is there an extended delay before G.M. liver cells are attacked by the immune system?

The delay in immune attack is common for many viral infectious deceases where auto-immune response plays substantial to significant role in pathogenesis of the decease. The classical example here are the viral hepatitis B, C and D where it is auto-immune attack that causes the massive death of liver cells (hepatocytes).



The delay in immune attack is explained by the following mechanisms:



The immune attack is developed against the surface antigen, in case of hepatitis it is the HbS Antigen. "Surface" means that this antigen has to appear on the cell surface in order to elicit immune response: the virus itself as well as the parts of destroyed cells are not immunogenic enough for this.



The second point explaining why the attack takes so long to develop is that it is primarily cell-mediated attack, the humoral factors play the secondary role here.



So, the usual "workflow" in this case is the following:



  1. Contamination with hepatitis virus.

  2. Virus propagation to hepatic cells and their infection.

  3. Processing of the viral DNA (either as DNA or first reversed-transcripted from RNA) so that it is integrated into cell normal processing pathways.

  4. Expression of viral proteins (=antigenes) and their anchoring in the cell membrane.

  5. Surface antigenes are detected by macrophagues, processed and expressed on their membrane for T-helpers
    ... (continuation of the usual cell-mediated immune response via T4 and T8 lymphocytes).

Every stage takes some time, the total duration can sum up to 4 to 12 weeks depending upon the viral activity and the immune system status.

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