#3 Cytotoxic Cell-Mediated Immune Response Flashcards
Where does Ag independent maturation of T-cells occur?
In thymus
Only stem cells are from the bone marrow
How are naive T cells activated?
By dendritic cells
Langerhans’ cells enter lymph node to become dendritic cells expressing B7
Where is the T cell zone in the lymph node?
parafollicular cortex
DC loaded with Ag and moved to T cell zone located in the parafollicular cortex
Naive T cells enter LN via blood stream
What do the co-receptors on CD4 and CD8 cells do?
Help to concentrate the attention of the T cell to the proper MHC
CD4 and CD8 are signaling co-receptors
What leads to clustering of TCRs?
Ag recognition by several TCRs
How is activation of T cells initiated?
To activate a T cell, we need ALL: TCR, CD3, CD4 or CD8
Co stimulation for T cell
CD80-CD28
B7 proteins (CD80/CD86) on the APC bind to CD28 (on T-cell)
Autocrine signaling and T cells
Newly activated T cells make IL-2 and use it to stimulate themselves to proliferate (# of activated T cells is doubled every 6 hours)
What is the T-cell growth factor?
IL-2…they then express IL-2R (receptor)
Naive T cells don’t have IL-2 receptor
Re-Stimulation of Activated T cell
Called “T cell homing” → going to tissue from where dendritic cell came from
2nd signal comes from MΦ
Co-stimulation options:
B7-CD28
CD40 (on APC)-CD40L (on B cells)
INC B7/MHC expression
Upregulation of CD40L protein does what?
Required for helping activated B cells
How are CD8+ T cells activated?
Cross-presentation of antigens
Cross-presentation of Ags
Some viral Ags are released from phagosome in cytoplasm of DC and then presented within class 1 MHC
They also display them within MHC class 2 for CD4+ helper T cells
CD8+ cells kill in 2 ways
- Granzyme and perforin
2. Fas-L-Fas (CD95): induces apoptosis via caspase activation