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Wikipedia:Osmosis/Type IV Hypersensitivity

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Video explanation

Having a hypersensitivity means that someone’s immune system has reacted to something in such a way that it ends up damaging them, as opposed to protecting them. There are four different types of hypersensitivities, and in the fourth type or type 4, the reactions are caused by T lymphocytes, or T cells, and so type IV is also sometimes known as T-cell-mediated hypersensitivity.

T cells are called T cells because they mature in the thymus. The two types of T cells that cause damage to tissues in type IV hypersensitivity are CD8+ T cells also known as killer T cells or cytotoxic T cells, as well as CD4+ T cells also known as helper T cells. CD8+ killer T cells do exactly what their name implies - they kill things. They are like silent assassins of the immune system that go after very specific targets. In contrast, CD4+ T cells locally release cytokines, which are small proteins that can stimulate or inhibit other cells. So CD4+ T cells act like little army generals coordinating immune cells around them. But both CD8+ and CD4+ cells start off as naive cells because their T cell receptor or TCR has not yet bound to their target antigen - which is that specific molecule it can bind to.

Alright so let’s play out a scenario. Let’s say someone’s skin brushes up against poison ivy, and gets the molecule urushiol all over. That molecule’s small enough to quickly make it’s way through the epidermis to the dermis, which is where it might combine with small proteins, it then might get picked up by a langerhans cell also known as a dendritic cell, which is a type of antigen-presenting immune cell. The dendritic cell then takes it to the nearest lymph node - the draining lymph node, where it presents the antigen on its surface using a MHC class II molecule, which is basically a serving platter for CD4+ T cells to come check out. If a TH cell recognizes the antigen, it binds to the MHC class II molecule using its T cell receptor, as well as CD4, which is a co-receptor and this is why it’s called a CD4+ T cell. At this point the CD4+ or helper T cell will also express a CD28 protein which will bind to the B7 protein on the surface of the dendritic cell. Once it binds to the TCR and the CD28 protein, the dendritic cell releases interleukin 12, a cytokine, or signaling molecule, that tells the naive CD4+ T cell to mature and differentiate into a type 1 helper T cell, or a TH1 cell - a sort of coming of age moment. At this point, the CD4+ T cell is no longer consider naive, instead it’s an effector cell, that’s able to release the cytokine IL-2, which helps both it and other T cells in the area proliferate, as well as interferon gamma, which activates phagocytes like macrophages and creates more TH1 cells. Those activated macrophages release proinflammatory cytokines like tumor necrosis factor, IL-1, and IL-6, which cause leakiness in the endothelial barriers and allows more immune cells into the area, all of which leads to local swelling or edema, redness, and warmth as well as systemic symptoms like a fever. Activated macrophages will also secrete lysosomal enzymes, complement components, and reactive oxygen species into the exposed area, which damages tissue. In the case of poison ivy, since this is all going on in the skin, it’s called dermatitis, inflammation of the skin. This kind of contact dermatitis rash doesn’t only happen from poison ivy, though, it can also happen in some people in response to wearing nickel - which is often found in earrings and necklaces. And another classic example is a tuberculin skin test, sometimes called a PPD, which is where a protein from the bacteria Mycobacterium tuberculosis is injected into the skin. If that person’s been exposed to TB previously, they’ll develop a type IV reaction where TB specific TH1 cells will migrate to the injection site and created an inflammatory response that results in the skin getting thick or hard - called induration. A type IV hypersensitivity is also referred to as a delayed-type hypersensitivity, since it usually takes about 48-72 hours to recruit TH1 cells to the site of exposure, so these skin reactions usually appear over that time window.

Apart from skin-related reactions, though, type IV hypersensitivity is also involved in several systemic diseases like rheumatoid arthritis, where TH1 cells cause inflammation in the joints, multiple sclerosis where TH1 cells damage myelin around nerve fibers, and inflammatory bowel disease, where TH1 cells cause inflammation in the lining of the intestine. In addition to TH1 cells, a naive T helper cell might differentiate into a TH17 cell, which is just another subclass of TH cells. These TH17 cells develop in response to dendritic cells secreting slightly different cytokines - IL-6 and TGF-beta. When that happens, the resulting TH17 cells are formed and they produce IL-17 with is particularly important in recruiting neutrophils.

Alright, so that was helper T cells or CD4+ T cells, but remember that in type IV hypersensitivity, damage to tissue can also be caused by Killer T cells, aka cytotoxic T cells aka CD8+ T cells and these destroy cells directly. CD8+ T cells can target antigen when they’re presented on MHC class I molecules, which are present on all nucleated cells in the body, meaning every cell is a potential victim for CD8+ T cells. MHC class I molecules present antigens from inside the cell, so this process is particularly important for when cells become infected with viruses or mutated like with cancer. If this were to happen, then an effector cytotoxic T cell specific to that antigen would use its TCR to bind to the MHC class I molecule, which would cause it to release its payload of perforin and granzymes. Perforin would perforate the target cell by forming pores, and these pores would allow the granzymes to enter into the cell. Once inside, the granzymes would induce apoptosis, or programmed cell death. Diseases where this cytotoxic mechanism is involved include tissue destruction in type I diabetes mellitus, where CD8+ T cells attack pancreas islet cells, as well as hashimoto thyroiditis, where CD8+ T cells attack thyroid epithelial cells. So as a quick recap, Type IV hypersensitivity leads to inflammation and tissue damage via T cells, which can be via either CD4+ T helper cells, which help coordinate the attack, or CD8+ killer or cytotoxic T cells, which directly do the attacking.

Resources

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http://www.uptodate.com/contents/poison-ivy-toxicodendron-dermatitis

Robbins Basic Pathology

First Aid USMLE Step 1

Pathophsysiology ,The Biologic Basis for Disease in Adults and Children, Seventh Edition

Pathophysiology, (Copstead), 5E

Netter’s Illustrated Pharmacology

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_IV_hypersensitivity