b cell differentiation Flashcards

1
Q

what are the steps of b cell development, and how is each cell type characterized?

A
  1. lymphoid progenitor: bone marrow
  2. pro b cell: bone marrow, no heavy chains
  3. pre b cell: bone marrow, cytoplasmic µ (IgM) heavy chains, pre-BCR receptor without rearranged light chains
  4. immature b cell: bone marrow, µ heavy chain + rearranged light chain => IgM surface BCR
  5. naive b cell: follicle of secondary lymphoid tissue, IgM and IgD surface BCRs
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2
Q

what are the components of an antibody?

A

two light chains (kappa or lambda)

two heavy chains (gamma, mu, epsilon, alpha, or delta)

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3
Q

what determines an antibody’s class?

A

heavy chain constant region (IgM, IgD, IgG, IgE, IgA)

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4
Q

what are the components of a BCR and how is it activated?

A
  1. antigen binds to surface IgM or IgD variable region
  2. associated proteins IgAlpha and IgBeta (CD79a and 79b) cross link
  3. ITAMs are phosphorylated
  4. downstream signaling activated
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5
Q

what genes/proteins contribute to B cell receptor diversity?

A

VDJ recombinase (RAG1 and RAG2 genes)

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6
Q

combinatorial diversity

A

recombination of:
V, D, and J for heavy chain
V and J for light chain

germline = V, D, J, constant
D/J recombination => V/DJ recombination => VDJ/constant region recombination

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7
Q

junctional diversity

A

addition/removal of nucleotides at the joining ends of gene segments during recombination; increases diversity => hypervariable regions

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8
Q

clonal deletion/central tolerance

A

removal of immature B cells in the bone marrow with self reactive IgM => apoptosis or receptor editing

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9
Q

receptor editing

A

occurs when a BCR is self reactive:

  1. re-expression of VDJ recombinase (RAG genes)
  2. V-J recombination is repeated to express the other light chain
  3. new heavy/light chain combo should no longer be self reactive
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10
Q

b cell anergy

A
  • occurs when a self reactive b cell escapes negative selection in the bone marrow
  • if this cell encounters self antigen in the absence of co-stimulation (complement or T cell response) it will become anergic (non-responsive)
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11
Q

allelic exclusion

A

heavy and light chain alleles from both parents are present, but one set of genes is silenced => a b cell expresses only one light chain and one heavy chain gene

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12
Q

what are two b cell second signal pathways?

A

CD21, CD40

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13
Q

CD21 b cell second signal

A
  • CD21 (CR2) is a complement receptor expessed with CD19 on the b cell surface
  • interacts with C3d (component of C3b) complement protein that is bound to the antigen
  • enhances b cell response 1000x
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14
Q

CD40 b cell second signal

A
  • after antigen binding, B cell upregulates B7 and CD40
  • BCR takes up antigen and expresses antigens on MHC class II to present to CD4+ cells
  • CD4+ T cell TCR binds the presented antigen
  • CD4+ T cell CD28 binds b cell B7
  • CD4+ T cell CD40L binds b cell CD40
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15
Q

what happens after b cell antigen binding?

A

migrates to secondary lymphoid tissues

in the germinal center b cells:

  • divide rapidly
  • interact with T cells, APCs, and follicular dendritic cells
  • undergo isotype switching, somatic hypermutation, and affinity maturation
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16
Q

why and how to b cells undergo isotype switching?

A
  • different isotypes are specialized for different protective responses
  • in response to cytokines + CD40-CD40L binding, b cells chainge their heavy chain constant region from IgM to IgG, IgA, or IgE
  • antigen specificity is not altered
17
Q

what is the role of follicular dendritic cells?

A
  • in the germinal center
  • capture complement/antigen complexes on the cell surface
  • present antigen complexes to B cells and allow selection for b cells with higher affinity/avidity antibodies
18
Q

affinity maturation

A
  • selection for increased antibody affinity/avidity by FDCs and T cells
  • occurs via hypermutation in the germinal center after t cell co-stimulation => random point mutations
19
Q

affinity vs avidity

A

affinity = how well it binds

avidity = how many antibodies bind at the same time => overall response

20
Q

how do high affinity/avidity b cells mature?

A
  • plasma cells (antibody producing)

- memory b cells (cell surface antibody)