Adaptive immune responses Flashcards

1
Q

(T/F) B cells produce antibodies specific to pathogens (protection against infection), while T cells promote killing of infected cells (eradication of established infection)!

A

True!

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2
Q

B cells and T cells have receptors that recognize foreign _______.

These cells are also known as ________ - major effector cells of the adaptive response.

A

antigens

lymphocytes

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3
Q

What are dendritic cells?

A

Dendritic cells bridge the INNATE and ADAPTIVE response. They are phagocytic cells and ‘present’ antigen to T cells in order to initiate the adaptive response.

They are called ‘ANTIGEN PRESENTING CELLS (APCs)’.

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4
Q

(T/F) Dendritic cells come from the lymphoid progenitor, while the B and T cells come from the myeloid progenitor. Both lymphoid and myeloid come from the pluripotent hematopoietic stem cell.

A

False!

Dendritic cells come from the myeloid progenitor, while the B and T cells come from the lymphoid progenitor. Both lymphoid and myeloid come from the pluripotent hematopoietic stem cell.

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5
Q

(T/F) All lymphocytes (B/T cells) have the same antigen receptor.

A

False!

Each lymphocyte has a UNIQUE ANTIGEN RECEPTOR, meaning that they each recognize a specific antigen.

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6
Q

What happens when an antigen interacts with its corresponding antigen receptor?

A

Interaction of antigen with its corresponding antigen receptor initiates SIGNALING CASCADES within the lymphocyte, which promotes CELL PROLIFERATION, DIFFERENTIATION, and ACTIVATION of effector functions of the lymphocyte in order to defend against the foreign invader.

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7
Q

1) Each lymphoid progenitor gives rise to a large number of lymphocytes, each bearing a _______ antigen receptor.

2) Lymphocytes with receptors that bind ____ antigens are eliminated before they become fully mature, ensuring _______ to ___ antigens.

3) When a foreign antigen interacts with the receptor on a ______ lymphocyte, that cell is activated and starts to divide. It gives rise to a clone of ________ _____, all of whose receptors bind the _____ antigen.

4) Antigen specificity is thus maintained as the progeny proliferates and differentiates into _______ cells. Antigen is eliminated by these cells, some lymphocytes are retained to mediate ___________ _______.

A

1) Distinct

2) Self; tolerance; self

3) Mature; identical progeny; same

4) Effector; immunological memory

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8
Q

What is required for adaptive immune responses to be initiated?

A

It requires antigens to be ‘presented’ by antigen presenting cells (APCs) to T cells!

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9
Q

Briefly describe how dendritic cells work.

A

During innate response (early on during infection), dendritic cell is in its immature step, where it is highly phagocytic (wants to engulf foreign particles).

Once it engulfs, it breaks the foreign particles into small peptides which are presented/ loaded onto MHC cells!

MHC cells present these peptides to T cells!

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10
Q

(T/F) Dendritic cells have PRRs and when bound to MAMPs, it leads to cytokine secretion. Nf-kb activation promotes the maturation of the dendritic cell.

A

True!

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11
Q

What are the morphological changes seen in a mature dendritic cell?

A

1) No longer phagocytic

2) Generates long filament like structures, which serve as display area for the MHC peptide complexes

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12
Q

Along with Nf-kb activation, _______ of the immature dendritic cell to _____ _____ is also required for maturation.

A

migration; lymph node

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13
Q

1) What is a Naive T cell?

2) What leads to T cell activation and differentiation?

3) Aside from the answer to number 2, what else contributes to T cell activation and differentiation?

A

1) A naive T cell is a cell that has not encountered its specific antigen.

2) T cell Receptor (TCR)-MHC:peptide engagement leads to T cell activation & differentiation.

3) Cytokines (secreted by the dendritic cell) & costimulatory molecules also contribute to T cell activation & differentiation.

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14
Q

Antigen peptides found in the _______ of the APC bind to MHC class I molecules. Peptide-MHC class I complexes are recognized by antigen receptors on the _______ T cell.

Antigen peptides found in the _______ of the APC bind to MHC class II molecules. Peptide-MHC class II complexes are recognized by antigen receptors on the _______ T cell.

A

Cytosol; CD8+ T cell

Intracellular vesicles; CD4+ T cell

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15
Q

(T/F) While viruses generally use the Class I MHC pathway, bacteria/fungi use the Class II MHC pathway.

A

True!

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16
Q

What are CD4 and CD8? What are CD4+ T cell & CD8+ T cell?

A

The T cell CO-RECEPTORS are CD4 & CD8. These are TRANSMEMBRANE GLYCOPROTEINS that bind to MHC molecules on APCs & facilitate T cell signalling.

Mature T cells express either CD4 or CD8 (not both!)

T cells that express CD4 are called CD4+ T cells and T cells that express CD8 are called CD8+ T cells. Each type has specific effector functions!

17
Q

How can viruses evade antigen processing and MHC presentation?

A

1) Inhibit proteasomal activity (no small peptides).

2) Block in MHC synthesis and/or ER retention (no MHC molecule).

3) Block loading of small peptides onto the MHC

4) Removal of class I from ER

5) Engagement of NK cell inhibitory receptors by “decoy” viral class I-like molecules

*some viruses will attack the MHC class I mechanism to hide from the immune system

18
Q

What are the two branches of adaptive immunity?

A

1) Humoral immunity

2) Cell-mediated immunity

19
Q

While humoral immunity is mediated by antibodies produced by _____ lymphocytes, cell-mediated immunity is mediated by effector functions of _____ lymphocytes.

Humoral immunity functions to defend against & eliminate ________ pathogens, while cell-mediated immunity functions to defend against & eliminate _________ pathogens.

A

B; T

Extracellular; Intracellular

20
Q

What do antibodies (part of humoral immunity) do?

A

Bind & neutralize pathogens or target pathogens for phagocytosis.

21
Q

(T/F) Specific types of T cells can activate macrophages to kill phagocytosed microbes (helper cells) or can directly destroy infected cells (cytotoxic cells).

A

True!

22
Q

(T/F) Both B and T cells require antigen presentation via MHC molecules.

A

False!

B cells do not require antigen presentation via MHC molecules. They have receptors on their surface that can directly engage with pathogens. B cell activation requires CYTOKINE SIGNALS generated by CD4 T cells.

Naive T cells interact with APC, triggering the proliferation and differentiation of T cells.

23
Q

Naive T cells undergo development in the ______.

Interaction with APC triggers proliferation & differentiation of T cells in the ________.

A

thymus; lymph node

24
Q

What are plasma cells?

A

Activated B cells that bind pathogens and neutralize their effects through antibodies.

25
Q

Engagement of TCR (T cell receptor) by peptide:MHC complex causes directed release of ________ and ______ complexed with ________ (scaffold protein).

A

perforin; granzymes; serglycin

26
Q

What happens after the release of perforin and granzymes by cytotoxic T cells?

A

Granzyme B is delivered into the cytosol of the INFECTED CELL via PORES formed by perforin, and targets + cleaves BID and PRO-CASPASE 3.

Truncated BID (tBID) disrupts mitochondrial outer membrane, and activated caspase 3 cleaves ICAD, releasing Caspase-Activated DNase (CAD).

Release of CYTOCHROME C into cytosol activates apoptosis, and CAD induces DNA fragmentation.

27
Q

Different pathogens activate different subtypes CD4+ T cells.

What is T(H)1 CD4+ subset important for?

A

T(H)1 CD4+ subset important for establishing VIRAL defence (also roles in activating macrophages).

28
Q

What are the four fates of antibodies secreted by plasma cells?

A

1) Neutralization (antibodies coat pathogens so they can’t adhere and enter host cell)

2) Opsonization (coats pathogen to promote phagocytosis)

3) Complement activation (antibody activates complement, which enhances inflammation, opsonization and lyses some bacteria)

4) ADCC (antibody-dependent cytotoxic cells): allows for the release of toxic enzymes (perforin, granzymes)

29
Q

(T/F) Different antibody ‘isotypes’ serve different roles in the humoral immune responses.

A

True!

30
Q

What are some mechanisms of immune evasion by viruses?

A

1) Antigenic variation

2) Inhibition of antigen processing (some viruses inhibit MHC class I-associated antigen presentation)

3) Inhibition of complement

4) Inhibition of innate immunity (some viruses produce inhibitory molecules that block the immune response)

31
Q

Lymphocytes arise from stem cells in ____ ______ and develop in the central lymphoid organs (______ _____ for B cells & ______ for T cells).

They then migrate to peripheral lymphoid organs where they may encounter antigen and undergo activation, proliferation and differentiation into effector cells.

A

bone marrow; bone marrow; thymus

32
Q

Effector CD4+ cells can differentiate into multiple subsets - T(H)1 cells mediate ________ _______, T(H)2 cells mediate defence against _______ _______, T(H)17 cells contribute to ___________.

Effector CD8+ T cells (cytotoxic T cells) directly kill infected cells.

A

macrophage activation; helminthic infections, inflammation