Lecture 17 Flashcards
How does the adaptive immune system kill a virus infected cell?
- antibody response (neutralize before infection)
- CTL response to kill the virus infected cell
How does the innate immune system kill a virus infected cell?
- interferon induction of anti-viral response
- NK cell
- gamma/delta T cells
How do viruses block the MHC I pathway?
- blocking TAP, or PLC
- retain MHC I in the ER
- redirecting MHC I into a lysosome
- down regulation of MHC I gene
What happens when infected cells express stress-induced molecules?
they can be recognized by NK cells and gamma/delta T cells
What are NK cells?
- lymphocytes that lack CD3 and express CD56
- 2 kinds: cytotoxic and IFN-y secreting
What do the two kinds of NK cells do?
Cytotoxic: kill virus infected cells by using cell to cell contact
IFN-y: activate macrophages after receiving cytokines from them
What do NK cell’s inhibitory and activating receptors do?
inhibitory: binds to MHC class I on target cell’s surface
activating: bind to stress-induced proteins
What is an example of an inhibitory receptor process on an NK cell?
SHP-1: a phosphatase that gets activated when a NK cell binds to an inhibitory receptor to MHC I
What is an example of an activating receptor process on an NK cell?
activating receptor binds to ligand, results in phosphorylation of Vav-1– leads to activation of NK’s cytotoxic machinery
How does SHP-1 control NK activity?
developing: activation of SHP-1 inactivates Vav-1 by removing phosphate
post-grad: makes sure NK is only engaged when needed (default is to override activating receptors)
What is an MIC protein?
look like MHC I (but no peptide or b2 microglobulin), only expressed on stressed cells
How does an NK cell determine if the cell is healthy or not
Healthy: NK binds to HLA-E– inhibitory signalling>activating signalling
Unhealthy: less MHC signalling and more MIC signalling– activating signalling>inhibitory signalling
How does NK cell actually do the killing part?
- NK’s integrin binds to ICAM-1 on target cell (integrins are activated because of chemokines binding and leading NK cell to the site of infection)
- adhesion molecules stick the NK to the target cell (so it doesn’t spread), and lytic granules are released for apoptosis
What is antibody dependent cell mediated cytoxicity? (ADCC)
target is coated with IgG, Fc binds to FcyRIII receptor on NK cell
- NK cells lytic granules are released onto the surface of the target cell
How do NK cells interact with resident macrophages?
macrophage releases IL-12 and IL-15 and NK cell proliferates into IFN-y secreting cell
- IFN-y binds to a receptor on the macrophage and stimulates it to increase phagocytosis and cytokines