Immunology HIV Flashcards
Draw the immunological synapse of dendritic cell & CD4+ T cell
Notes
Discuss T cell activation & consequences of an incomplete synapse
T cell activation depends on the environment.
If there are an complete immunological synapse, T cell becomes activated & have a Th1 or Th2 response
Th2 if B cell presents
If the immunological synapse is incomplete the T cell dies or anergic
List the 3 antiviral/Th1 cytokines
INF-alpha & - beta
IL-12
Where does antibodies come from
Secreted from B cell receptors
What is the 4 functions of antibodies
Opsonisation
Complement
Ab dependent cellular cytotoxicity
Neutralization
2 ways a HIV infection be prevented
By a neutralizing antibody
Prevent infection/toxic particles to bind to cell receptor at the site of entry
What neutralizing antibody is the most optimal response
IgA, IgG
How to make antibodies
- Gene of B cell receptor
- Chopped up finely
- Recombination & junctional diversity
- B cell mature in 3 days
- T cell presentation for somatic hypermutation & class switching
Can you make antibodies for HIV before you acquire an infection
Yes, antibodies are made randomly
Can you make neutralizing antibodies w/o acquiring HIV
No, neutralizing antibodies require T cell presentation but can be passively transferred from mother to child
How is a virus transmission prevented
If there is neutralizing antibodies & antiviral factors
What is the 8 steps of an effective anti-viral immune response
- Virus can not be transmitted because mucosal is covered with/ neutralizing antibodies & specific anti-viral factors
- If the virus is transmitted & manages to infect & enter a cell, the cell will sense it through innate PRR molecule inside the cell (anti-viral toll like receptors, 3,7,8 & 9)
- If the PR molecule is unregulated the infected cell will start producing interferons & prepare for death
- Interferons will prime APC in the environment to present to CD4+ T cells in a Th1 manner
- CD4+ T cells will activate via Th1 cytokines CD8+ T cells to kill virally infected cells
- At cells that escape CD8+ T cell killing or down regulate MHC 1 will be killed by NK cell
- Generation of memory cells
- Resolution by up regulation of anti-inflammatory markers like TGF-beta (angiogenesis & healing) & IL-10 (Dow regulates lymphocytes & APC interactions)
3 ways how an infected cell prepare for self death
Up regulating:
1. Own internal antiviral proteins- restriction enzymes
2. FAS
3. MHC 1
State 2 instances when a NK cell get activated
- MHC 1 down regulation
- Activating signals overwhelm inhibitory signals
List 6 ways how virus escape from getting killed
- Rapid mutation causing poor recognition
- Inactivate TLR signaling by sequestering signaling molecule
- Prevent interferons secretion
- Prevent MHC class 1 up regulation (stop host cell from dying)
- Prevent MHC class 2 up regulation (stop CD4 T cell response)
- Prevent up regulation of second signals (CD4 T cell die)