Antigen receptors and Lymphocyte development Flashcards
What is an antigen?
A molecule which specifically binds a T-cell receptor or an antibody (Ab) site
What is an immunogen?
Any molecule that elicits an immune response by binding to a T-cell receptor an antibody
Are all antigens immunogens?
No
Are all immunogens antigens?
Yes
What is the order, lowest to highest of immunogencitiy?
Amino acids Haptens Lipids Steroids Carbs Proteins
What is a hapten?
Low molecular weight molecules which can never elicit an immune response on its own unless coupled with another molecule
What is an epitope?
Antigenic determinant
They are the region of an antigen which can be recognized and bound by a receptor (TCR, BCR)
What are the preformed receptors?
PRR (Pattern recognition receptors) and TLR (Toll-like receptors)
KAR (Killer activation receptors) and KIR (Killer inhibition receptors) on NK cells
CR (complement receptors)
FcR on phagocytes
What the generated receptors?
T cell receptors (TCR)
B cell receptors (BCR)
Describe the structure of a BCR:
Have heavy and light chain with variable and constant regions
Contain co-receptors Ig-Beta and Ig-Alpha
Secreted immunoglobulins are very similarly shaped; they have an Fc portion, an ag binding portion, and a complement binding portion (side of base of Y)
What do Ig-Beta and Ig-Alpha do?
NOT INVOLVED IN BINDING
They act as signal transduction molecules that tell the B well when the antigen is bound and transmit a signal to the nucleus to up/down regulate certain actions
Describe the structure of a TCR:
Have an alpha and beta chain (95%)
Extracellular portion consists of a variable (V) region, a constant (C) region, and a hinge (H) portion so that it can move a bit during binding
Also has a transmembrane region and short cytoplasmic tails
CD3 portion
What does the CD3 portion of a TCR do?
NOT INVOLVED IN BINDING
It starts the signal cascade to the nucleus and includes the ζ portions (zeta)
What is allelic exclusion?
Start with one chromosome (either maternal or paternal) and the other maintains the germ line sequence
Normally it just makes a heavy chain for the B cell
If it messes up and the receptor is not coming out right, we go on to our back up chromosome
How much specificity does one B cell have and why?
One specificity
It only has one VDJ and VJ rearrangement and can only bind to one epitope