Molecular Basis of Ag Recognition Flashcards
T cell receptors need to bind to MHC AND need a stimulatory signal from the APC
True
Costimulation involves a protein B7 on APC and protein CD28 on T cell
There are adhesion molecules to keep T cell and MCH together
True
TCR/MHC
B7/CD28 (CTLA-4)
Adhesion pair LFA-1/ICAM-1
Non-traditional T cells
γ and 𝛿 T cells are relatively few, are in epithelial tissues
T cell repertoire is limited
Directly activated without APCs
No memory cells
Role in recognizing lipid antigens
B cells become plasma cells
Plasma cells are found in lymphoid organs (not in plasma)
Can present Ag to T cells
CD19, coreceptor for BCR, is a marker of B cells
True
B cell receptors don’t need APC
True
BCR
2 light, 2 heavy chains
Surface Ig (IgM or IgD)
2 mechanisms for activating B cells
- Antigens activate B cells with help of T helper cell (called Thymus Dependent or TD Ags)
- Lipids, carbs, polynucleotides activate B cells without help of T cells and are called “Thymus Independent” or TI Ags
B cell activation via thymus dependent (TD)
Antigen binding to B cell receptor and delivers the first signal to B cell
Helper T cell delivers 2nd signal via CD40 ligand and cytokines
B cell proliferates and differentiates into plasma cells
B cell activation via thymus independent (TI)
B cell receptors are activated by cross-linking with antigens
Multiple receptors on B cell bind to the antigen at once and this causes cross-linking, which makes a signal
Signal is transduced by Igα and IGβ
B cell activation needs both interleukins and CD40 to make it go and become a plasma cell
True
Polysaccharides do not bind to class II MHC proteins, but peptide antigens do
True