CD8 T Cell Effects (Exam 3) Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 2 main mechanisms CD8+ T cells use to kill target cells?

A
  1. perforin + granzymes
  2. Fas ligand
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2
Q

What is the shorthand name for CD8+ T cells?

A

CTLs

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3
Q

In terms of their role in CTL killing of target cells- What does perforin do? What do granzymes do?

A

perforin: forms pore in target cell
granzymes: enter pores –> apoptosis

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4
Q

Fas ligand is expressed on _______ and Fas receptor on _______ which engage to cause apoptosis.

A

CTLs
target cell

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5
Q

What problem occurs with chronic antigen exposure and persistent immune response?

A

CD8+ T cell exhaustion

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6
Q

CD8+ T cell exhaustion leads to:

(Increased/decreased) T cell proliferation and effector function.

(Increased/decreased) IFN-y production and cytotoxicity.

(Increased/decreased) inhibitory receptors.

A

decreased
decreased
increased

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7
Q

What are the 2 kinds of gamma-delta T cells?

A

peripheral g-d T cells
epithelial g-d T cells

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8
Q

Which kind of cells act as a link between innate and adaptive immunity?

A

peripheral gamma-delta T cells

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9
Q

Main function of peripheral gamma-delta T cells.

A

protection from bacterial infection

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10
Q

Main function of epithelial gamma-delta T cells.

A

produce tissue growth factors during tissue injury & preserve epithelium integrity during stress

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11
Q

Where are epithelial gamma-delta T cells located?

A

intestinal / skin epithelium

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12
Q

(T/F) Gamma-delta T cells require MHC to recognize and respond to antigen.

A

False - can respond w/o MHC

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13
Q

What two kinds of antigens do gamma-delta T cells respond to?

A

lipid antigens
microbial metabolites

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14
Q

What are the 2 phases of signal transduction?

A
  1. cytosolic phase
  2. nuclear phase
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15
Q

In the cytosolic phase of signal transduction, the ligand binds to the receptor which causes cytosolic region of the receptor to ________ which activates an enzyme downstream to activate ______.

A

change conformation
transcription factor

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16
Q

In the nuclear phase of signal transduction, the modified ______ enters the nucleus which leads to a change in ________.

A

transcription factor
gene expression

17
Q

CD8 and CD4 T cell receptors are _______ with an alpha and a beta chain.

A

heterodimers

18
Q

Term for the variable regions on the alpha-beta chain of T cell receptors which determines the specificity to MHC-antigen.

A

CDR (complementarity determing regions)

19
Q

What two molecules attach to the alpha-beta T cell receptor which signals for T cell activation?

A

CD3
zeta proteins

20
Q

What molecules on T cell receptor complex regulates T cell responses, strengths adhesion between T cells and APCs, and mediates cellular homing?

A

accessory molecules

21
Q

CD3 and zeta proteins (covalently/noncovalently) attach to alpha-beta T cell receptors and transduce signals to activate T cells when they are (phosphorylated/dephosphorylated) when the ligand binds.

A

noncovalently
phosphorylated

22
Q

Term for area which forms a stable contact between a T cell receptor complex and MHC-peptide complex on APC.

A

immunological synapse

23
Q

What is the function of an immunological synapse?

A

stabilize contact between T cell and MHC

24
Q

What 3 structures are at the center of an immunological synapse?

A

TCR complex
coreceptors
costimulators

25
Q

What structures are present at the periphery of an immunological synapse? What purpose?

A

integrins for stabilization