T cell activation and signaling Flashcards
What are the three Th cell activation signals?
- TCR + Ag/MHC
- costimulation and survival signals
- IL-2 + IL-2R -> proliferation; other cytokines -> differentiation
What is an issue with TCR-MHC binding?
It quickly dissociates
How can the TCR-Ag-MHC complex stay together long enough to generate a signal?
accessory/adhesion molecules
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
- 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)
Why are CD4 and CD8 co-receptors important?
- must bind to MHC
- required for TCR signal
What regions of MHC does CD8 and CD4 bind?
CD8: MHC-I a3 domain
CD4: MHC-II B2 domain
What types of proteins are involved in TCR and BCR signaling? What does each type of protein do?
- tyrosine as well as serine/threonine kinases
- add a phosphate group - protein phosphotases
- desphosphorylate proteins - lipid kinases and lipases
- phosphorylate (kinases) or cleave (lipases) lipids to generate second messengers (e.g DAG and IP3) - G proteins
- cycle between active (GTP-bound) and inactive (GDP-bound) states - TFs
What T cell receptors have no intrinsic kinase activity and how do they compensate?
TCR and CD3
compensate by having ITAMs on their cytoplasmic tails (CD3)
How do ITAMs work?
contain two tyrosine residues that can each be phosphorylated by kinases
How does tyrosine phosphorylation of a protein modify its function?
- regulate a protein’s enzymatic activity
- regulate interactions between proteins
- Src homology 2 (SH2) and protein tyrosine binding (PTB) domains bind phosphorylated tyrosines - regulate a protein’s subcellular localization
What is the structure of Src family tyr kinases (SFNs), what is the function of each domain? Name an example of an SFN
- lipid modifications (anchor to membrane)
- UNIQ (localization)
- SH3 (binds proline-rich regions of proteins)
- SH2 (binds tyrosline phosphorylated sequences)
- KINASE (kinase domain)
- R (regulatory domain)
- Lck in T cells
How are Src kinases regulated?
- 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
Describe the steps of TCR signaling cascade
- TCR binds to MHC-Ag
- CD4/8 binds to MHC
- CD4 brings along a kinase, Lck
- Lck has a phosphorylated ITAM - CD45 dephosphorylates Lck
- Lck phosphorylates ITAMs (P-ITAMs) on CD3
- ZAP70 is attracted to the P-ITAMS
- ZAP70 contains SH2 domains - ZAP70 phosphorylated by Lck
- ZAP70 is activated - P-ZAP70 phosphorylates LAT an adaptor protein
- PLCgI is attracted to P-LAT
- PLCgI is phosphorylated by P-ZAP70
- P-PLCgI metabolizes PIP2 into DAG and IP3
- IP3 opens ER and Ca2+ channels –> Ca2+ enters cytoplasm - Ca2+ and DAG facilitate activation of TFs
What are lipid rafts? What’s found in them (T cells)?
- 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)
What proteins are found in lipid rafts in inactive B cells and activated B cells?
inactive:
- Lyn (a Src kinase)
active:
- BCR + Ag
- Lyn
- Iga and Igb