T cell differentiation Flashcards

1
Q

TCR

A

t cell receptor
-contains alpha/beta or gama/sigma

  • both chains contain a V and C domain
  • chains connected by disulfide bonds
  • there are different chains (sigma and gama) found on a minor population of T cells
  • antigen binding occurs in the V (variable) region
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2
Q

antigens on all T cells

A
  • TCR (could be alpha/beta or gama/sigma)

- CD3

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3
Q

alpha/beta TCR T cells differentiate into what?

A

CD4 and CD8 T cells

-these CD’s represent coreceptors

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4
Q

what do T cells respond to?

A
  • protein antigens (on pathogens) the get INTO host cells via infection or uptake
  • respond mainly to peptides
  • whereas antibodies on b cells interact with antigens of ALL chemical composition FLOATING in the blood/bodily fluid
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5
Q

T cells interact with

A

-peptides bound within the grooves of MHC on surface of host cell

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6
Q

MHC expression

A
  • class one: all nucleated cells (ie not RBC’s)

- class two: expressed constitutively only on APC’s (DC, B, and macrophages, thymic non-lymphoid cells)

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7
Q

how do MHC class 1 and 2 molecules interact with T cells

A
  • class 1: interacts with CD8 on CD8+ cells

- class 2: interacts with CD4 on CD4+ cells

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8
Q

what happens when a CD4 is bound by an MHC class 2

A

-cytokines are released

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9
Q

what happens when a CD8 interacts with an MHC class 1

A

-killing of infected host cell

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10
Q

why do we have CD8 and CD4 on different cells?

A

-they bind to different MHC molecules and therefore we can create different immune responses based upon the cell type infected and the antigen present

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11
Q

once the CD’s are bound by their respective MHC, what happens molecularly

A

-they enhace the signal through the TCR

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12
Q

T cell development overview

A
  • lymphoid progenitor made in the BM
  • transported to the thymus
  • double negative
  • double positive alpha/beta CD4/CD8
  • positive selection
  • single positive CD4 or CD8
  • negative selection
  • mature CD4+ and CD8+ released into periphery
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13
Q

what happens in the double negative thymocyte?

A

-TCR genes start to rearrange

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14
Q

what else can be made by the common lymphoid progenitor in the thymus

A

-NK cell

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15
Q

double negative thymocyte differentiates into

A
  • either gama/sigma CD3 or

- alpha/beta (CD3) without CD4 or 8(these move on to selection)

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16
Q

Double positive cells

A
  • alpha/beta that have both CD 4 and 8
  • if these interact with thymic epithelial cells then they curvive and choose either a CD4 or CD8 lineage
  • CD4 is more abundant and therefor more commonly chosen
17
Q

T cells that have survived positive selection go on to

A
  • negative selection
  • thymic dendritic and medullary epithelial cells, expressing MHC 1 and 2 interact with positively selected T cells
  • if these cells interact with the dendritic cells, they undergo apoptosis (this shows too high of an affinity for self)
  • if they do not interact, they survive
18
Q

what composes the TCR complex?

A
  • TCR
  • CD3
  • zeta
19
Q

what is zeta

A
  • signal transduction molecues associated with the TCR

- these are membrane spanning proteins