B Cell Development, Activation, and Differentiation Flashcards
where are B cells made? (3) where do they mature?
B cells originate in the fetal liver, spleen, and bone marrow/bursa; mature in bone marrow?
what stimuli are required to cause B cell maturation?
the bone marrow stroma signals a pre-B cell to rearrange heavy and light chains and begin maturation
what events cause a B cell to undergo apoptosis? (4)
- when random D and J segments join with a random V segment, if a B cell does not express a functional H chain, it gets a second chance, but if after that 2nd chance the H chain still no function = apoptosis
- after H chain, L-chain rearrangement occurs; if not function 1st time, second chance, but if not functional second time = apoptosis
- when H and L chain associate, they try to form a BCR; but if no BCR formed = apoptosis
- or if they form a self-reactive BCR, second chance and then if still self-reactive = apoptosis
what product do mature B cells produce?
antibodies
know the basic structure of immunoglobulins
2 main regions
Fab region: antigen binding site that binds only a specific epitope; is HIGHLY VARIABLE and made up of the light chain
Fc region: determines the class of antibody, and therefore its effector response; is a constant region and made up of the heavy chain
name the different classes of antibodies (5)
- IgG
- IgM
- IgA
- IgD
- IgE
identify basic differences in structure for each antibody class
monomers: IgG, IgE, IgD
dimer: IgA
pentamer: IgM
(dimers and pentamers joined by a joining chain that is different than the J of V-J recombo!!)
know the signals required for activated B cells to make antibody (3)
- stimulation by antigen without T cells via simultaneous activation of BCR and co-receptor (BCR recognizes something on a bacterial cell wall and is activated)
- stimulation by antigen without T cell via strong cross-linking of BCR via a repetitive protein epitope
- stimulation by T cell; requires an activated T cell
compare and contrast activation of a B cell independent of T cell and by T cells
if activated without T cell help, there is a weaker signal, no class switching, and no increase of B cell affinity for antigen (half-assed response); but if stimulated by T cell; leads to clonal expansion of B-cells, production of plasma cells, AND production of memory B cells (a full, much stronger response)
understand the clinical consequence of class-switching
once class-switching occurs there is no going back (develop this more)
know the order in which antibody classes are produces and why this matters
a naive B cell will express membrane bound IgM and IgD; after exposure to antigen we get memory B cells and IgG is predominant; can help figure out where an animal is in its exposure to a pathogen/vaccine response
know the anatomical location in which antibody classes predominate (serum, mucosa)
IgA: secreted at mucosal surfaces like resp tract, GI tract, urinary tract, skin, mammary glands, and eyes
IgG: main antibody in serum and the makes up the majority of antibodies produces
IgM: predominates in blood
IgD: primarily on naive B cells as a receptor for antigen (fact-check)
IgE: in tissues and on mast cells and basophils
know the main functions of antibodies (see immunology class brainscape)
IgA:
IgE: eosinophil and mast cell degranulation
IgD:
IgG:
IgM: