T-Cell Activation & Generation of Effector Cells Flashcards
explain the types of adaptive immune responses?
B lymphocytes produces antibodies, involved in humoral immunity and targeting extracellular microbes
T lymphocytes are involved in cellular immunity and targeting intracellular microbes
where are T and B cells generated?
bone marrow, T cells then migrate to the thymus where they mature
name some peripheral lymphoid organs
lymph nodes, spleen, lymphoid tissue, mucosal tissues
The life stages of T lymphocytes
generated in bone marrow, mature in thymus
mature naive T cells cells released from thymus into blood, recirculation between blood and peripheral lymphoid organs (lymph nodes, spleen, MALT)
encounter antigens that they recognise - lymphocyte activation, proliferation & differentiation into effector/memory cells
Effector T cells => specialised functions
Memory T cells => memory responses (faster, efficient)
MALT
mucosal associated lymphoid tissue
T cells are designed to fight what?
intracellular microbes
- intracellular bacteria in phagosomes of phagocytes
- viruses: free in cytoplasm of cells (phagocytes or non-phagocytes e.g. epithelial cells)
- cancer cells (mutated proteins from cancer cells)
do T cells recognise antigens directly?
no, only after processing and presentation
T cells recognise antigens via their T cell receptor (TCR)
αβ TCR T cells recognise:
- cell bound peptides
- peptides from foreign Ags when bound to MHC
TCR structure?
2 chains: alpha and beta are most common TCR type)
gamma delta is another type
each chain has 1 variable (V) domain + 1 constant (C) domain - antigen binding site consists of the V regions (V alpha and V beta)
MHC I and MHC II presentation and structure
MHC I: presentation of peptides to CD8+ T cells
composed of alpha chain + beta 2-microglobulin
MHC II: presentation of peptides to CD4+ T cells
composed of alpha chain + beta chain
(γδ T cells recognise antigens that are not displayed by MHC I and MHC II)
expression of MHC 1?
MHC I: all nucleated cells
expression of MHC 2?
APC’s dendritIc cells, B cells
what are APC’s?
cells that specialise in the capture and presentation of antigens (Ag) to CD4+ T cells
- CD8+ T cells recognise Ags displayed by nucleated cells (not just APC but also cells that are not APCs)
professional APC’s
professional APC’s include
Dendritic cells
- skin mucosa tissues
- the only APCs capable to present to naïve T cells
- causes naive T cell activation, clonal expansion and differentiation into effector T cells
- transport microbes from tissues (e.g. epithelia) to draining lymph nodes
Macrophages
- present to previously activated effector T cells
- causes effector T cell activation and activation of macrophages
- phagocytose microbes
- activation of TH1 cells, which activate macrophage to kill ingested microbes
DCs & signals for naïve T cell activation (slide 36)
Signal 1: recognition of Ag (peptide:MHC complex) on APC
- not sufficient to induce T cell activation
- without signal 2 => no response or anergy of T cell
Signal 2: co-stimulation
- activation of naive T cells
- binding of co-stimulatory molecules (eg. CD86) on APC by co-stimulatory receptor (CD28) on T cell
- more important for naïve T cells than for restimulation of previously activated effector or memory T cells
Signal 3: cytokines produced by APCs (after infection)
- regulate the differentiation of activated T cells into different types of effector T cells
- eg. IL-4 from APC => differentiation into Th2
- ensure the right type of effector T cell is generated
(effector T cell type that is most suited to respond and help eliminate the infection that triggered the response)
what does infection upregulate?
upregulates the co signaling molecules so there are more signal 2’s, and infection also makes it the dendritic cell a better APC