MHC Flashcards
List the characteristics of BCRs.
- binds free/soluble antigens
- Iga/b transduce signals via ITAMs
List the characteristics of TCRs.
- binds antigen-derived peptide and MHC
- two subunits a/b with a constant and variable region
- peptide source is endogenous or exogenous
MHC I is presented on all (____) cells.
nucleated
MHC II is presented on all (____) cells.
APCs
Peptide binding groove of 8-10 amino acids is which MHC class?
A. MHC I
B. MHC II
A. MHC I
MHC I presents bound peptides to (____) and the peptides are derived from (_____) proteins.
A. CD4; endogenous
B. CD4; exogenous
C. CD8; endogenous
D. CD8; exogenous
C. CD8; endogenous
Where are peptides in MHC II presented and derived from?
- present to CD4, Thelper cells
- derived from exogenous antigens
MHC I leads to the activation of which cell?
T cytotoxic cells
MHC expression can change with:
- Genetic regulatory components: transcription activators (NLRs)
- Viral interface: shuts down MHC I
- Cytokine-mediated signaling: TNFa and Type 1 IFNs
How are MHC alleles expressed?
- codominantly
- both maternal and paternal MHC genes are expressed in offspring
What is MHC restriction?
- TCRs recognize own protein but do not react to their own protein
- if Tcells recognize MHC they expand
Where does the source of protein antigens come from in MHC class I?
cytoplasm