T cell differentiation Flashcards
TCR
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
antigens on all T cells
- TCR (could be alpha/beta or gama/sigma)
- CD3
alpha/beta TCR T cells differentiate into what?
CD4 and CD8 T cells
-these CD’s represent coreceptors
what do T cells respond to?
- 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
T cells interact with
-peptides bound within the grooves of MHC on surface of host cell
MHC expression
- 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)
how do MHC class 1 and 2 molecules interact with T cells
- class 1: interacts with CD8 on CD8+ cells
- class 2: interacts with CD4 on CD4+ cells
what happens when a CD4 is bound by an MHC class 2
-cytokines are released
what happens when a CD8 interacts with an MHC class 1
-killing of infected host cell
why do we have CD8 and CD4 on different cells?
-they bind to different MHC molecules and therefore we can create different immune responses based upon the cell type infected and the antigen present
once the CD’s are bound by their respective MHC, what happens molecularly
-they enhace the signal through the TCR
T cell development overview
- 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
what happens in the double negative thymocyte?
-TCR genes start to rearrange
what else can be made by the common lymphoid progenitor in the thymus
-NK cell
double negative thymocyte differentiates into
- either gama/sigma CD3 or
- alpha/beta (CD3) without CD4 or 8(these move on to selection)
Double positive cells
- 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
T cells that have survived positive selection go on to
- 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
what composes the TCR complex?
- TCR
- CD3
- zeta
what is zeta
- signal transduction molecues associated with the TCR
- these are membrane spanning proteins