Fig. 11.8 Effector mechanisms of antibody-mediated diseases. Antibodies cause disease by A, Inducing
inflammation (A). TSH, Thyroid-stimulating hormone.
228 CHAPTER 11 Hypersensitivity
Examples and Treatment of Diseases Caused
by Cell- or Tissue-Specific Antibodies
Antibodies specific for cell and tissue antigens are the
cause of many human diseases, involving blood cells,
basement membrane and induce inflammation, a form of
glomerulonephritis. Antibodies against cells include those
of platelets). Antibodies that interfere with hormones
or their receptors were mentioned earlier. In most of
these cases, the antibodies are autoantibodies, but less
commonly, antibodies produced against a microbe may
cross-react with an antigen in the tissues. For instance, in
antigen; antibody crossreacts with myocardial
Fig. 11.9 Human antibody-mediated diseases (type II hypersensitivity). The figure lists examples of
CHAPTER 11 Hypersensitivity 229
antigens in the heart, producing the cardiac inflammation
that is characteristic of rheumatic fever.
Therapy for antibody-mediated diseases is intended
spleen is the major organ where opsonized blood cells
are phagocytosed. Some of these diseases respond well
to treatment with intravenous IgG (IVIG) pooled from
healthy donors. How IVIG works is not known; it may
bind to the inhibitory Fc receptor on myeloid cells and B
cells and thus block activation of these cells (see Chapter
7, Fig. 7.15), or it may reduce the half-life of pathogenic
antibodies by competing for binding to the neonatal
Fc receptor in endothelial cells and macrophages (see
B cells, results in depletion of the B cells and may be
useful for treating some antibody-mediated disorders.
Other approaches in development for inhibiting the
production of autoantibodies include treating patients
with antibodies that block CD40 or its ligand and thus
inhibit helper T cell–dependent B cell activation and
inducing tolerance in cases in which the autoantigens
DISEASES CAUSED BY ANTIGENANTIBODY COMPLEXES
Antibodies may cause disease by forming immune
complexes that deposit in blood vessels (Fig. 11.7B).
Many acute and chronic hypersensitivity disorders are
caused by, or are associated with, immune complexes (Fig.
11.10); these are called type III hypersensitivity disorders.
Immune complexes usually deposit in blood vessels,
especially vessels through which plasma is filtered at high
pressure (e.g., in renal glomeruli and joint synovium).
Therefore, in contrast to diseases caused by tissue
antigen-specific antibodies, immune complex diseases
immune complex deposition, such as kidneys and joints.
Fig. 11.10 Immune complex diseases (type III hypersensitivity). Examples of human diseases caused
by the deposition of immune complexes, as well as two experimental models. In the diseases, immune
caused by complement-mediated and Fc receptor–mediated inflammation.
230 CHAPTER 11 Hypersensitivity
Etiology, Examples, and Therapy of Immune
Antigen-antibody complexes, which are produced during
normal immune responses, cause disease only when
they are formed in excessive amounts, are not efficiently
removed by phagocytes, and become deposited in tissues.
Complexes containing positively charged antigens are
of blood vessels and kidney glomeruli. Once deposited in
the vessel walls, the Fc regions of the antibodies activate
The first immune complex disease studied was
subsequently developed a systemic inflammatory disease.
This illness could be recreated in experimental animals by
systemic administration of a protein antigen, which elicits
of any therapy involving injection of foreign proteins, such
as antibodies against microbial toxins, snake venoms and
T cells that are usually made in goats or rabbits, and even
some humanized monoclonal antibodies that are used to
treat different diseases and may differ only slightly from
A localized immune complex reaction called the
a protein antigen to a previously immunized animal; it
results in the formation of immune complexes at the site
vaccinated or already have antibodies against the vaccine
antigen, a painful swelling that develops at the injection
site represents a clinically relevant Arthus reaction.
In human immune complex diseases, the antibodies
may be specific for self antigens or microbial antigens.
In several systemic autoimmune diseases, many of the
clinical manifestations are caused by vascular injury when
complexes of the antibodies and self antigens deposit in
vessels in different organs. For example, in systemic lupus
any organ, causing vasculitis and impaired blood flow,
leading to a multitude of different organ pathologies and
symptoms. Several immune complex diseases are initiated
These complexes deposit in kidney glomeruli, causing an
complex diseases caused by complexes of antimicrobial
antibodies and microbial antigens lead to vasculitis. This
may occur in patients with chronic infections with certain
viruses (e.g., the hepatitis virus) or parasites (e.g., malaria).