Lymphocyte development Flashcards
B cell development occurs in the ___ and is antigen ___
Bone marrow, independent
What are the 5 stages of B cell maturation?
- Pre-pro-B cell
- Pro-B cell
- Pre-B cell
- Immature B cell
- Mature B cell
What is pre-pro-B cell stage expressing/ whats going on with the genes
Expressing B220+
Ig genes are in germ line configuration
Pro-B cell - what happens to the genes? What proteins are expressed?
Heavy chain rearrangement
-D to J first, then V to D
Lambda5 and VpreB are expressed
What occurs at the pre-B cell stage? what is it called at this stage?
express the heavy chain with a surrogate light chain, along with Ig-alpha and Ig-beta
Called the pre-BCR
The pre-BCR receives a signal causing which 4 things?
- Downregulate TdT and RAGs (transient)
- Proliferate
- Rearrange light chain
- Prevent rearranging of second heavy chain (allelic exclusion)
What occurs at the immature B cell stage
Light chain is assembled with heavy chain into the final IgM immunoglobulin molecule which is then expressed on the cell surface
Clonal deletion occurs
What is clonal deletion?
autoreactive BCR are identified in the bone marrow and many of these cells eliminated by apoptosis
What is central tolerance
product of clonal deletion is central tolerance, meaning most of the remaining cells do not react to self
What is receptor editing?
autoreactive B cells can reattempt to rearrange light chain segments
- remaining V to J segments on the other chromosome
What are anergic B cells
Autoreactive B cells that escape the bone marrow but remain unresponsive to antigen
What is peripheral tolerance
B cells that are autoreactive encounter antigen in the periphery and are deleted by apoptosis
Mature B cells - characteristics
Express both IgM and IgD
Plamsa cells
Following antigen stimulation mature B cells become plasma cells
No longer proliferates but produces copious amounts of antibody
What do BCRs signal through ?
Ig alpha and Ig beta
What do Ig alpha and Ig beta have on them
immunoreceptor tyrosine based activation motifs (ITAMS)
Describe the 4 steps of BCR signalling
- BCR crosslinks by binding antigen
- Crosslinking brings the src family kinases together which phosphorylate the ITAMs
- Phosphorylated ITAMs act as a docking site for Syk kinases
- Syk kinases phosphorylate molecules that recruit compoenets of several signalling pathways
What occurs during T-dependent B cell stimulation?
- BCR binds antigen, brings it in
- presents antigen to Th cell via class II MHC
- Stimulated through CD40/CD40L signals