Important ones Flashcards
Describe TLRs
- Cause a change in gene expression i.e. allowing production of cytokines
- 10 TLRs in humans, each recognising distinct MAMPs
- examples:
- TLR1 recognises lipopeptides
- TLR3 recognises dsRNA
- TLR4 recognises LPS etc.
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always membrane associated
- Can be on the cell-surface or endosomal membranes!!
- The extracellular domain of TLR3 has a horseshoe shape formed by leucine-rich repeats (recognises MAMP (ligand)).
- The inner surface has β-sheet structure and forms the ligand binding domain (dsRNA in this case)
- Usually 2 subunits need to come together: dimerisation triggers signalling
Describe what NOD-like receptors are and their function
Cytoplasmic receptors
NOD-like receptors (NLR)
- large group of cytoplasmic receptors that recognise bacterial components e.g. peptidoglycan, flagellin
function:
- trigger cells to make cytokines, particularly pro-inflammatory cytokines
- signal expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines
- trigger assembly of inflammasomes
- inflammasomes are multisubunit complex that cleaves inactive cytokine precursors into active cytokines
Describe the mechanism of action of TLRs, NLRs and inflammaosomes upon MAMP recognition
- Cell recognises MAMP through TLR → induces signalling → changes in gene expression → cytokines produced
- Many cytokines are initially made in an inactive form (important so they aren’t innapropriately produced) these are called pro-cytokines
- they need to be cleaved to become activated cytokines
- Bacterium been taken up by phagocytosis → material from phagolyssome released (MAMPs like LPS) → recognised by NLRs (in cytoplasm), and also signal nucleus to start making different genes? → inflammasome produced
- Inflammasome protein complex needed to process pro-cytokines by cleaving them
- Cytokines produced fully
- NLRs important for bacterial infections
- Receptors in cytoplasm for dealing with viruses
- RIG-I-like receptors detect viral RNA produced within host cells
- induce different response → induce cells to start making inteferons (sub-type of cytokine)
What are RIG-I-like receptors?
RIG-I-like receptors
- viral sensors that detect viral RNA produced within host cells
- signal expression of interferons
Describe the 5 types of inflammatory mediators produced by sentinel cells, and give examples of each type
- Lipid mediators
- e.g. prostaglandins
- stimulate dilation of blood vessels and act on pain receptors
- e.g. aspirin stops synthesis of prostaglandins (analgesic)
- e.g. prostaglandins
- Vasoactive amines
- e.g. histamine, bradykinin
- chemicals which call dilation of blood vessels
- Chemoattractants
- e.g. fmet-leu-phe
- help phagocytes move into the tissues
- Complement proteins
- e.g. C5a
- Cytokines
- e.g. TNF
- production of by sentinel cells
Name the 5 sub-families of cytokines and their functions
- IL-1 family:
- most produced as inactive precursors that must be cleaved by inflammasomes
- important in inflammation
- Haematopoietin superfamily:
- includes factors involved in leukocyte differentiation e.g. GM-CSF but also IL-2, IL-4, IL-6 (important in T cell responses).
- broadly, they stimulate the generation of new white blood cells from bone marrow
- Interferons:
- involved in responses to viruses
- TNF family (e.g. TNFα = tumour necrosis factor):
- many are transmembrane proteins that are shed, important in inflammation.
- very potent and toxic
- Chemokines:
- involved in cell movement (e.g. IL-8 a.k.a CXCL8 → induce neutrophil movement out of blood stream into tissues)
- induce cell movement
- act like C5a
- Cytokine receptors for the various subfamilies also tend to have similar structures and to signal in a similar way
Describe the local and systemic effects of each of the 5 types of cytokines that may be produces by tissue-resident macrophages in the early stage of immune response
- IL-1-beta
- Local effects:
- Pro-inflammatory
- Activates lymphocytes
- Local tissue destruction increases access of effector cells
- Systemic effects: Fever & production of IL-6
- IL-6
- Local effects: activates lymphocytes(B & T cells)
- increaes antibody production
- System effects: fever, induces acute-phase protein production
- CXCL8
- local: chemotactic factor recruits neutrophils, basophils and T cells to site of infection
- IL-12
- local: activates NK cells, induces differentiation of CD4 T cells into TH1 cells
- TNF-alpha
- Local effects: Activates vascular endothelium and increases vascular permeability which leads to increased entry of IgG, complement, and cells to tissues and increased fluid drainage to lymph nodes
- Systemic effects: Fever, mobilisation of metabolites & shock (can cause sepsis)
What are interferons and what are the 2 types, how do they act
- Viral infection induces the production of interferons
- “Intruder alert cytokines”
- Interferons Interfere with viral replication
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Type I interferons: IFN-α ; IFN-β
- IFN-α (several genes) & IFN-β (1 gene) act in a very similar way
- many (almost any) cell types make type I interferons after viral infection.
- Induce expression of interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs)
- Some cell types (e.g. dendritic cells) are specialised for this – express high levels of endosomal TLRs e.g. TLR3 and TLR9.
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Type II interferon: IFN-γ
- Main role is to modulate immune responses
- different structure to IFN-alfa and beta
Describe the mechanism of action of type 1 interferons and how they induce resistance to viral replication
- Virus infected host cell → IFN-α, IFN-β produced
- IF cell has TLRs → inteferon alfa and beta expressed and produced
1. Induce resistance to viral replication in all cells.- not only the infected cell but secreted inferons can bind to surrounding cells and help them.
- How they induced resistance to viral replication? →
- Induce expression of endoribonuclease that degrades viral RNA and also, protein kinase phosphorylates eukaryotic initiation factor 2, inhibiting protein translation. (good because most proteins made by a virus infected cell are viral proteins)
2. Increase MHC class I expression in all cells
- Induce expression of endoribonuclease that degrades viral RNA and also, protein kinase phosphorylates eukaryotic initiation factor 2, inhibiting protein translation. (good because most proteins made by a virus infected cell are viral proteins)
- MHCI is required for antigen presentation to cytotoxic T cells, so infected cells are more easily recognised and killed.
- important in inducing adaptive immunity
- Activate NK cells to kill virally infected cells more efficiently
- Induce chemokines to recruit lymphocytes
1. chemokines are chemoattractants
Describe type 2 interferons, who makes them, their function
- Made by neutrophils, NK cells, T cells
- unlike Type I inteferons, not all cells make it
-
Primary role in adaptive immunity
- particularly T-cell immunity
- Increases expression of MHCI and MHCII
- helps induce formation of Cytotoxic T cells
- MHC II expression increased → induce T helper cells
- IFN-γ made by T helper cells activates macrophages in responses to intracellular pathogens
- activates macrophages to kill intracellular pathogens in the macrophage itsself
Describe the B cell Receptor
- NB! different to soluble antibodies as it is inserted into the lipid bilayer
- Membrane immunoglobulins (antibodies) contain and extra ~ 26 hydrophobic amino acids at the C-terminus.
- Most B-cells express IgM and/or IgD as B-cell receptors.
- when developing
- Recognise and bind to antigen, but cannot generate a signal itsself!
- Membrane immunoglobulins are associated with two other proteins, IgALPHA and IgBETA.
- Image:
- Iga and Igb contain a single ITAM (Immunoreceptor Tyrosine Activation Motif) in their long cytoplasmic domains.
- monomer of IgM
- region that passes lipid bilayer, only a few amino acids ~3 pertrude past the lipid bilayer which is not enough to transduce a signal
- through the Ig-alpha and Ig-beta which protrude further into the cell allows signalling
How are immunoglobulins encoded in genes? what do genes consist of
- Heavy (H) chains - Chromosome 14
- Kappa chains - Chromosome 2
- Lambda chains - chromosome 22
- Each locus (Chromosome) has multiple VARIABLE region genes and one CONSTANT region genes.
- The variable regions (each) are encoded by 2 or more exons
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Light chain V regions are encoded by 2 segments of DNA:
- Kappa chainsas example
- single constant region gene, multiple downstream genes making variable region
- most variable region encoded by Vkappa exon, some made by Jkappa exon
- in intact kappa protein we will find most of sequence is made of constant region, variable region made mostly up of Vkappa gene(exon) and a little bit of J kappa gene(exon)
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Heavy chains are encoded by 3 segments of DNA
- 3 exons/segments of DNA
- V D and J exon. (D for diversity)
- most made up by Constant region exon, rest made up of variable, mainly V exon
Descsribe the process of somatic V(D)J recombination
- B cell differentiation triggered:
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Rearrangement of light and heavy chain genes occurs during B cell during differentiation from Lymphoid SC into B cell (before antigen contact) → permanent changes in the DNA
- Using Kappa light chain as example:
- DNA is permanently rearranged: a V gene is spliced to a J gene, and intervening DNA is excised.
- V and J segments are spliced together and lie very close to the constant region
- Each V gene has its own promoter → an enhancer element allows the gene to be transcribed: This occurs because now the V gene (including its promoter) are now close to the enhancer element after splicing (gene rearrangement occurred)
- Intervening sequences are removed by RNA processing → mRNA produced for variable and constant regions → kappa light chain made
- Using Kappa light chain as example:
Describe the mechanism of class switching
- Shown below at the top is the arrangement of all the heavy chain genes in the genome
- Mature B cell VDJ + IgM (Constant region mu) closest → IgM
- Adjacent to the heavy chain genes is a gene sequence know as a switch sequence.
- this allows recombination of the VDJ gene with another class constant region gene e.g. IgA heavy constant region.
- Looks similar to somatic recombination but enzymes and process is different
- DNA inbetween is lost (irreversible). This means that the B cell cannot switch back to e.g. IgM
- switch regions aren’t conserved but tend to be rich in G which AID likes to bind to.
- How is the enzyme acting → next
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Class switching by DNA recombination between switch regions:
- intervening DNA lost
- irreversible
- NB. Different mechanism to V-D-J joining. Initiated by AID acting at switch regions (G –rich tandem repeated DNA sequences found close to C region genes).
Describe the mechanism of action of AID
-
Mechanism of action of activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID)
- AID deaminates cytidine to form uracil (C→U)
- AID is expressed in activated B lymphocytes, only active on ssDNA
- Activity triggers DNA repair pathways
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Repair pathways in B cells are error-prone, leading to different (2) mutational outcomes:
- Mismatch repair, base excision repair resulting in : Somatic hypermutation
- If it occurs in the G-rich switch sequence you get more Uracil added (AID likes to bind to these regions) ultimately causing double stranded breaks resulting in Class switching
- AID mutation causes immunodeficiency: Hyper-IgM Syndrome Type 2
Describe the concept of MHC restriction
- T lymphocytes can only recognise antigen in the context of self-MHC molecules
- this is known as MHC restriction
- Experiments with inbred mouse strains and virally infected cells (had the same MHC proteins on their surfaces)
- Mouse Strain A and mouse strain B immunised with Virus, T cell from the mice were isolated and cultured in vitro with cells infected with the same virus
- if you took T cells from mouse strain A and mixed with cells from mouse A → would kill mouse A infected cells
- if you took T cells from mouse strain B and mixed with cells from Mouse B → T cells can’t kill infected cells from mouse A
- SO T cells will only recognise antigen thats being presented to them by ?? (31 min)
- why did this happen? → 2 ideas
- 2 receptors on T cells – one (TCR) for antigen, one for MHC?
- 1 thats recognised antigen, and one recognising MHC
- 1 receptor on T cells (TCR) – recognises antigen + MHC?
- only 1 receptor on t cell that recognises antigen and MHC
- 2 receptors on T cells – one (TCR) for antigen, one for MHC?
x-ray crystallography proved answer
- Unknown peptide antigen bound as part of the structure
- At the tip of the molecule in a groove, there was a peptide → proved that T cells recognise MHC and foreign peptide.
- MHC, they bind foreign peptide and transport it to the cell surface
Describe how MHC interacting with co-receptors leads to T cell signalling?
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Engagement of the CD4/CD8 co-receptors with the TCR complex enhances phosphorylation of the ITAMs, promoting T cell signalling
- how does it enhance signalling: CD4 as example
- CD4 with MHC protein enahnces signalling because Cterminus of CD4 protein has a protein kinase associated with it called lck tyrosine kinase, which can phosphorylate the iTAM motifs present on CD3 complex associated with TCR.
- Engagement of the CD4/CD8 co-receptors with the TCR complex enhances phosphorylation of the ITAMs, promoting T cell activation
- CD4/8 associate with lck tyrosine kinase.
In what 2 forms can IgA be found in? and why/where + describe IgA structure
- In blood: monomer
- do not know what it does in monomer
- In secretions: dimer
- tears, saliva, mucose secretions that coat the mucosal surfaces
- this is where most infections occur so its important
- can be found as other polymers
- dimer needs a J chain to form properly
- has a secretory component (wrapped around the Fc regions of the dimer)
- helps protect IgA against proteolysis, so e.g. in the gut its important for protection against degradation
- Secretory component can also bind bacteria itsself in a fairly non-specific way
- secretory component is a member of the immunoglublin super gene family
- made up of 5 immunoglobulin domains that interact with Fc region of the dimer
Describe how a Naive T cell becomes an effector T cell
- Naive T cell will go into lymphoid tissue, if it meets antigen displayed on appropriate MHC molecule + signal from the co-receptor CD4 or CD8
- NB! T cells get chosen for cytotoxic or helper cell in the thymus during thymic selection.
- Naive T cell:
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Recognition of MHC + peptide + co-receptor (CD4/8) → SIGNAL 1
- this allows the T cell to recognise antigen and become activated, however this is not the whole story
- to activate a naive T cell in the first place, more is required, signal 2
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Recognition of CO-STIMULATORY molecule(s) → SIGNAL 2
- T cells exposed to Signal 1 in the absence Signal 2 become unresponsive or “tolerised”
- co-stimulatory molecules are additional proteins found on the T cell and antigen-presenting cell that also have to engage in order for the T cell to become activated.
- many of these, example is CD28 (on T cell) interacting with B7 (on antigen presenting cell)
- → this is known as signal 2. without signal 2, the T cell becomes unresponsive or tolerised
- Cytokines convert activated T cells into different subsets → (SIGNAL 3)
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Recognition of MHC + peptide + co-receptor (CD4/8) → SIGNAL 1
Describe TH1 cells
TH1 cells - IL-12 gamma interferon (Signal 3)
- typically most abundant in blood.
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TH1 cells are generated in response to IL-12 and gamma-interferon
- i.e. thats the TH1 signal 3
- TH1 cells
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Produce IL-2, gamma-interferon and TNF which →
- Activate macrophages → inflammation (Classic CELL-MEDIATED immunity)
- particularly gamma-inteferon is good at activating macrophages and inducing inflammation
- activated macrophages become much better at killing organisms they ingested, e.g. they may be able to kill tubercle bacilli where before they weren’t able to
- Important in intracellular infections
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Induce B cells to make IgG1 and IgG3 (opsonizing) antibodies
- produces a pro-inflammatory response
- Important for the development of cytotoxic T cells
- Activate macrophages → inflammation (Classic CELL-MEDIATED immunity)
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Produce IL-2, gamma-interferon and TNF which →
- overall TH1 cells are important in intracellular infections, but also important for extracellular infections (through stimulating IgG1 and IgG3 production)
Describe TH2 cells
- TH2 cells are generated in response to IL-4
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TH2 cells produce IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13
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activate eosinophils and mast cells
- allergy- and parasitic-associated cells
- IL-4 and IL-13 induce B cells to make IgE (promotes mast cell degranulation)
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activate eosinophils and mast cells
- important in helminth infections (large EC parasites) and allergy
Describe TH17 cells
- tend to be found in lymphoid tissue near mucosal surfaces
- TH17 cells generate in response to TGF-beta and IL-6
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TH17 T cells produce IL-17 and IL-22.
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Activates epithelial cells (which line mucosal surfaces) and fibroblasts.
- Proinflammatory, especially at mucosal surfaces.
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Recruit neutrophils to sites of infection
- good at getting neutrophils to move out of the blood and onto the mucus surface where the infection is
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Activates epithelial cells (which line mucosal surfaces) and fibroblasts.
- Important in fungal and extracellular bacterial infections, role in AUTOIMMUNE disease?
Describe T-FH cells (Follicular helper T cells)
- Found specifically in lymphoid follicles
- Lymph node anatomy:
- Lymph node is divided into areas predominantly T cells (blue), and follicles around the outside, where B cells differentiate into plasma cells
- when B cells undergoes clonal selection and clonal expansion, it forms these lymphoid follicles
- TFH reside in these follicles, normally T and B cells separate in lymph nodes, but here they mingle
- Lymph node is divided into areas predominantly T cells (blue), and follicles around the outside, where B cells differentiate into plasma cells
- Lymph node anatomy:
- TFH cells generate in response to IL-6
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Help naïve B cells differentiate into plasma cells and memory cells.
- thymus-dependent antigens
- Promote somatic hypermutation + class switching
- through producing cytokines that switch on the expression of AID (activation induce cytesinedeaminase) which promotes somatic hypermutation and class switching
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Contact dependent (requires interaction between co-stimulatory molecules CD154 and CD40), but also produce IL-21.
- for this to occur, B and TFH cells have to interact with each other (in the lymph follicles), B cell presents antigen to T cell, co-stimulatory molecules CD154 (T cell) and CD40 (B cell) → activation of somatic hypermutation + class switching
- also produce IL-21
Describe T Regulatory cells
- down regulates the immune response
- generated in response to TGF-beta (Signal 3)
- 2 types:
- Natural Treg
- Develop in the Thymus, recognise MHC + self-peptide
- against what you would expect, recognising MHC + self-peptide, they should normally be selected against, but these don’t
- Produce cytokines IL-10, TGF-beta which downregulate T cell responses
- dependent on T cells interacting with cells directly → contact-dependent
- Develop in the Thymus, recognise MHC + self-peptide
- Induced Treg
- Developed in secondary lymphoid tissues, particularly mucosal lymphoid tissue
- Recognise MHC + non-self peptide
- produce cytokines that downregulate immune responses
- act on T cells e.g. TH1 TH2 etc.
- Downregulate inflammatory responses etc.
- Natural Treg