immunological tolerance Flashcards
1
Q
how can tolerance be divided into
A
central and peripheral tolerance
2
Q
where does central tolerance take place
A
- thymus for T cell and bone marrow for B cells
3
Q
what happens if a B cell receptor binds too strongly to a self antigen in the bone marrow during central tolerance
A
- receptor editing
- negative selection via apoptosis
4
Q
what happens during central tolerance of T cells
A
- T cells bind to thymic epithelial cells in the cortex
- if they don’t bind at all they are eliminated by positive selection
- remaining cells binds to dendritic cells in thymus or medullary thrice epithelial cells ones which bind too stronlgy are eliminated by apoptosis
- aire a transcription factor enables the medullary thrice epithelial cells to express cell antigens from all different areas of the body
5
Q
how can peripheral tolerance be divided
A
- intrinsic and extrinsic
- intrinsic includes apoptosis, ignorance and anergy
- extrinsic include Treg cells
6
Q
what happens in intrinsic peripheral tolerance
A
- ignorance (self reactive T cells never are exposed/reach to the cells they react to e.g. if the cells it is reactive to are in eyes- immune cells don’t go to eyes)
- anergy- T cell binds to host cell however not activated due to absence of co-stimulation molecules
- apoptosis
7
Q
what happens in extrinsic peripheral tolerance
A
- T regulatory cells
- FOXP3 gene involved in development
- mutation in gene can lead to autoimmunity specifically IPEX
- releases inhibitory mediators (IL10)
- has a receptor which binds to IL2- CD25
- CTLA4 bind to CD80//86 causes negative stimulation prevent binding of CD28