T cell activation and signaling Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three Th cell activation signals?

A
  1. TCR + Ag/MHC
  2. costimulation and survival signals
  3. IL-2 + IL-2R -> proliferation; other cytokines -> differentiation
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2
Q

What is an issue with TCR-MHC binding?

A

It quickly dissociates

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3
Q

How can the TCR-Ag-MHC complex stay together long enough to generate a signal?

A

accessory/adhesion molecules

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4
Q

What adhesion/accessory molecules are used by a CD4+ T cell and pAPC to hold the TCR-Ag-MHC complex together? Describe if each interaction is adhesive or costimulatory

A
  • CD4 binds to MHC-II (adhesion)
    -CD28 on a T cell binds to CD80/86 on APC (costimulatory and adhesive)
  • LFA-1 on a T cell binds to ICAM-1 on APC (adhesion)
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5
Q

Why are CD4 and CD8 co-receptors important?

A
  • must bind to MHC
  • required for TCR signal
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6
Q

What regions of MHC does CD8 and CD4 bind?

A

CD8: MHC-I a3 domain
CD4: MHC-II B2 domain

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7
Q

What types of proteins are involved in TCR and BCR signaling? What does each type of protein do?

A
  1. tyrosine as well as serine/threonine kinases
    - add a phosphate group
  2. protein phosphotases
    - desphosphorylate proteins
  3. lipid kinases and lipases
    - phosphorylate (kinases) or cleave (lipases) lipids to generate second messengers (e.g DAG and IP3)
  4. G proteins
    - cycle between active (GTP-bound) and inactive (GDP-bound) states
  5. TFs
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8
Q

What T cell receptors have no intrinsic kinase activity and how do they compensate?

A

TCR and CD3

compensate by having ITAMs on their cytoplasmic tails (CD3)

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9
Q

How do ITAMs work?

A

contain two tyrosine residues that can each be phosphorylated by kinases

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10
Q

How does tyrosine phosphorylation of a protein modify its function?

A
  1. regulate a protein’s enzymatic activity
  2. regulate interactions between proteins
    - Src homology 2 (SH2) and protein tyrosine binding (PTB) domains bind phosphorylated tyrosines
  3. regulate a protein’s subcellular localization
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11
Q

What is the structure of Src family tyr kinases (SFNs), what is the function of each domain? Name an example of an SFN

A
  1. lipid modifications (anchor to membrane)
  2. UNIQ (localization)
  3. SH3 (binds proline-rich regions of proteins)
  4. SH2 (binds tyrosline phosphorylated sequences)
  5. KINASE (kinase domain)
  6. R (regulatory domain)
  • Lck in T cells
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12
Q

How are Src kinases regulated?

A
  • closed/inactivate = SH2 binds to regulatory domain (bites its tail)
  • primed/inactive = release of the regulatory domain from SH2 via dephosphorylation of the regulatory domain
  • open/active = autotransphorsphorylation of the kinase domain
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13
Q

Describe the steps of TCR signaling cascade

A
  1. TCR binds to MHC-Ag
  2. CD4/8 binds to MHC
  3. CD4 brings along a kinase, Lck
    - Lck has a phosphorylated ITAM
  4. CD45 dephosphorylates Lck
  5. Lck phosphorylates ITAMs (P-ITAMs) on CD3
  6. ZAP70 is attracted to the P-ITAMS
    - ZAP70 contains SH2 domains
  7. ZAP70 phosphorylated by Lck
    - ZAP70 is activated
  8. P-ZAP70 phosphorylates LAT an adaptor protein
  9. PLCgI is attracted to P-LAT
  10. PLCgI is phosphorylated by P-ZAP70
  11. P-PLCgI metabolizes PIP2 into DAG and IP3
    - IP3 opens ER and Ca2+ channels –> Ca2+ enters cytoplasm
  12. Ca2+ and DAG facilitate activation of TFs
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14
Q

What are lipid rafts? What’s found in them (T cells)?

A
  • rigid regions of the p.m rich in cholesterol and sphingolipids which are distinct from the surronding membrane
  • site where GPI-anchored and lipid modified signaling proteins are found (e..g LAT and CD4 + inactivated Lck)
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15
Q

What proteins are found in lipid rafts in inactive B cells and activated B cells?

A

inactive:
- Lyn (a Src kinase)

active:
- BCR + Ag
- Lyn
- Iga and Igb

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16
Q

Describe costimulation in T cells. What does it do, when does it act?

A
  • CD28 binds to CD80/86 on APC “costimulates” the T cell
  • costimulation –> increase T cell response in conjugtion with TCR
  • increases IL-2 and IL-2R ts
  • cannot act unless TCR is engaged
17
Q

What signal is missing in a 3 signals for T cell activation model to create anergy? How does this occur, what are the consequences?

A
  • no signal 2 (costimulation) –> anergy
  • occurs when a non-APC presents self Ag on MHC-II (non-APCs do not carry CD80/86)
  • anergic cells cannot reactivate even with signal 1 + 2
18
Q

What is the effect of CD28 signaling?

A

improves the IL-2R:
- moderate affinity (gamma + beta subunits) –> high affinity (gamma + beta + alpha subunits)

19
Q

Describe the “if”, “then” and “but we know” of issues of how naive CD8+ T cells are activated to become CTLs?

A

if:
- the TCR on Tc cells can only recognize endogenous Ag presented on MHC-I
- naive T cells can only be activated when there’s a second signal provided by APCs

then:
- therefore, Tc cells should only be activated when APCs are infected

but we know:
- Tc cells are activated in the absence of APC infection, how does this happen?

20
Q

How are naive CD8+ T cells activated?

A
  1. licensing of DCs by Th1 cells:
    - CD40 on APC interacts with CD40L on an activated Th cell + microbial products –> TLR activation
  2. cross-presentation of Ag.s
    - DC presents exogenous Ag on MHC-I + provides costim molecules + releases IL-12 –> signal 1, 2 and 3 –> proliferation and differentiation
21
Q

Describe the three signals required for naive CD8+ T cells to be activated

A
  1. signal from TCR after recognition of Ag + MHC-I on a licensed APC
  2. constimulatory signal (CD28 binds to CD80/86)
  3. activation of its high affinity IL-2R by IL-2 released from Th1 or Th17
22
Q

For the following defects, name the impaired function and the disease it causes: ZAP70 and LFA-1

A

ZAP70:
- impaired function = defective signal from TCR
- disease = SCID

LFA-1:
- impaired function = defective T-APC adhesion
- disease = leukocyte-adhesion defect (LAD)