T cell activation Flashcards
1
Q
T cell activation facts
A
- APCs are required
- Signal 1 = MHC/peptide interaction w/ TCR
- Signal 2 = CD80/86 (aka B7 - on APC) interaction w/ CD28 (on T cell)
- Signal 3 = cytokines!
- This all leads to T cell proliferation, differentiation, and survival
2
Q
T cell inhibition w/ CTLA4
A
- Relies on CTLA4 inhibitory receptor, which is a homolog of CD28
- Has a higher affinity for CD80/86/B7 than CD28
- When it binds CD80/86/B7 → inhibition T cell proliferation, cell cycle progression, and IL-2 synthesis
- CTLA4 is expressed on CD4+ and CD8+ T cells after activation (difference from CD28, which is constitutively expressed on all T cell subsets regardless of activation)
- Exception: CTLA4 is constitutively upregulated in Tregs, but the exact mechanism is being worked out
- Probably serves as an internal checkpoint to regulate and attenuate immune responses (via CD28) if need be
3
Q
T cell inhibition w/ PD-1
A
- PD-1 is more widely expressed than CTLA4 (found on monocytes, B, T, and NK cells)
- It’s major fxn is limiting autoimmunity and T cell activity in peripheral tissue in response to infection
- PD-L1 (on “APCs”) binds PD-1 → T cell inactivation, tolerance, and/or anergy
- Tumor cells exploit this fxn byexpressing PD-L1 and by inducing PD-1 expression on tumor-specific T cells → inhibition of tumor-specific T cells → immune resistance by tumor microenvironment