Cytokine messanger systems: slides 1-8 Flashcards

1
Q

When are cytokines usually in the body, and where?

A

when we are sick, in the bloodstream

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2
Q

What two pathways do they utilize?

A

JAK-STAT and Ras-MAP

“janus kinase”

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3
Q

JAK-stat signaling:

1) in cytokine signaling, how does this pw work?

A

1) cytokine binds to a homo/hetero dimeric receptor with janus kinases constitutively attached cytosolically
2) cytokine-receptor binding causes conformational change —> JAKs phosphorylate themselves

3) In turn, these phosphorylate the receptors
4) STAT proteins bind to phosphorylated receptor chains
5) JAKs phosphorylate the STATs
6) P-STATs form dimers and translocate/accumulate in nucleus where the regulate genes

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4
Q

Cytokines: “critical” roles

A

1) inflammation
2) linking
3) activation of T cells (Th1)/Th2 polarization)
4) Activation of B cells (Isotype switching)
5) control of hematopoiesis

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5
Q

Pleiotropic

A

cytokines exhibit multiple effects on growth and differentiation of a variety of cell types

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6
Q

what are three general characteristics of cytokines?

A

1) redundancy (overlapping between cytokines)
2) synergy (act collectively to enhance their outcomes)
3) antagonism (blocks other cytokines)
4) cascade: one can induce another

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7
Q

Example of a cascade (slide 8)

Activated Th – IFN-gamma –>

A

Macrophages – IL-12 –> Activated Th cells –> IL-2, IFN-gamma, TNF-beta, other cytokines

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